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Country/Territory Region World Bank Income group (2024) Poverty headcount ratio (2017 PPP) at Year $2.15 a day $3.65 a day $6.85 a day % of population Aruba: Latin America & Caribbean High income N/A Afghanistan: South Asia Low income N/A Angola: Sub-Saharan Africa Lower middle income 31.1%: 52.9%: 78.0% 2018 Albania: Europe & Central Asia
Northern America: High income 48.27% 2022 1.42 2022 1.762 2022 6.3 2022 Uzbekistan: Central Asia: Lower middle income 48.30% 2022 2.88 2003 2.495 2022 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Caribbean: Upper middle income 48.52% 2022 Venezuela: South America — 54.96% 2022 2.50 2014 1.244 2006 Vietnam: South-eastern Asia
Asian countries by GDP (PPP) per capita in 2017. This is a list of Asian countries by GDP per capita based on purchasing power parity. All figures are given in international dollars and are the latest estimates from the International Monetary Fund. [1]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The world's 26 poorest countries, home to 40% of the most poverty-stricken people, are more in debt than at any time since 2006 and increasingly vulnerable to natural ...
Half of the world's 75 poorest countries are experiencing a widening income gap with the wealthiest economies for the first time this century in a historical reversal of development, the World ...
This is a list of gross domestic product (GDP) at purchasing power parity (PPP) for the latest year. [1] All sovereign states with United Nations membership and territory in Asia or Oceania are included on the list apart from the transcontinental countries which are included in the lists for Europe (when they are current or suspended members of the Council of Europe) or Africa in the case of ...
African and Middle Eastern countries ravaged by war and famine remain the poorest in the world, according to new published data. RANKED: The 28 poorest countries in the world — where people live ...
Much of the improvement has occurred in East and South Asia. In Sub-Saharan Africa GDP/capita shrank with 14 percent, and extreme poverty increased from 41 percent in 1981 to 46 percent in 2001. Other regions have seen little or no change. In the early 1990s the transition economies of Europe and Central Asia experienced a sharp drop in income.