35 Countries with the Lowest Poverty Rate in the World

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In this article, we take a look at 35 countries with the lowest poverty rate in the world. If you would like to skip our detailed analysis of poverty reduction, you can directly go to 10 Countries with the Lowest Poverty Rate in the World.

Combatting Poverty - The Case of India 

Poverty is one of the most significant issues plaguing countries in the modern era. According to predictions by the United Nations, if current patterns stay consistent, an estimated 7% of the world’s population could still be living in poverty by 2030. This amounts to almost 575 million people. This is why several countries have made it a priority to combat poverty, India being one of them. In 2023, UNDP reported that the country had managed to lift 415 million individuals out of poverty within a span of 15 years from 2005/6 to 2019/21. In other words, the country had halved its multidimensional poverty in less than two decades. Note that data from the year 2020 is missing due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Another report by Surjit S. Bhalla and Karan Bhasin, published on March 1, 2024, showcased that India had managed to eliminate poverty below the $1.90-a-day poverty line. This is the old poverty line used by the World Bank before it decided to update the line to $2.15 a day in September 2022.

UNDP’s 2023 report on the Multidimensional Poverty Index, released July 11, 2023, noted that India had reduced deprivation across all indicators of multidimensional poverty from 2005/6 to 2019/21. Multidimensional poverty measures poverty across three dimensions: monetary poverty, education, and basic infrastructure. There are a total of 12 indicators across these three dimensions, and if people are deprived of three or more of them, they are considered to be ‘multidimensionally poor.’ In India, the overall incidence of multidimensional poverty decreased from 55.1% to 16.4%. The percentage of those deprived of adequate nutrition fell from 44.3% to 11.8%.

The percentage of those who were poor and deprived of cooking fuel fell from 52.9% to 13.9%. The number of those deprived of sanitation decreased from 50.4% to 11.3%. Moreover, the number of those who were multidimensionally poor and deprived of adequate drinking water decreased from 16.4% to 2.7%. Lastly, the percentage of individuals deprived of adequate housing lowered from 44.9% to 13.6%. Thus, India showed remarkable progress in decreasing multidimensional poverty throughout all its indicators.

How Did India Achieve its Goals? 

A report by Reuters mentioned that the Indian government supplies free food grains to more than 800 million people. This is one of the elements that helped improve nutrition in the country. Furthermore, the government has also spent billions on subsidizing services such as electricity, education, and health, further lessening the region's poverty. The report by Surjit S. Bhalla and Karan Bhasin mentioned that much of the poverty decrease occurred due to the redistribution policies that led to a wide variety of publicly funded programs.