variables: 819759
Data license: CC-BY
This data as json
id | name | unit | description | createdAt | updatedAt | code | coverage | timespan | datasetId | sourceId | shortUnit | display | columnOrder | originalMetadata | grapherConfigAdmin | shortName | catalogPath | dimensions | schemaVersion | processingLevel | processingLog | titlePublic | titleVariant | attributionShort | attribution | descriptionShort | descriptionFromProducer | descriptionKey | descriptionProcessing | licenses | license | grapherConfigETL | type | sort | dataChecksum | metadataChecksum |
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819759 | $2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall | international-$ in 2017 prices | 2024-01-31 11:21:41 | 2024-04-11 04:18:40 | 1963-2022 | 6368 | $ | { "name": "$2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": 5, "numDecimalPlaces": 2 } |
0 | total_shortfall_215 | grapher/wb/2024-01-17/world_bank_pip_2017ppp/income_consumption_2017#total_shortfall_215 | 2 | major | $2.15 a day - Total daily shortfall | World Bank | This is the amount of money that would be theoretically needed to lift the income or consumption of all people in poverty up to $2.15 a day. However, this is not a measure of the actual cost of eliminating poverty, since it does not take into account the costs involved in making the necessary transfers nor any changes in behaviour they would bring about. | [ "Extreme poverty here is defined as living below the International Poverty Line of $2.15 per day.", "The data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.", "Depending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the income of each household is attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).", "Non-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account." ] |
For a small number of country-year observations, the World Bank PIP data contains two estimates: one based on income data and one based on consumption data. In these cases we keep only the consumption estimate in order to obtain a single series for each country. You can find the data with all available income and consumption data points, including these overlapping estimates, in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data. | { "$schema": "https://files.ourworldindata.org/schemas/grapher-schema.003.json", "originUrl": "https://ourworldindata.org/poverty" } |
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