global monitoring report 2015-2016
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Development Goals in an Era ofDemographic Change
Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016
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Development Goals in an Era of Demographic Change
Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016
A joint publication of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund
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© 2016 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org
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Attribution—Please cite the work as follows: World Bank Group. 2016. Global Monitoring Report2015/2016: Development Goals in an Era of Demographic Change. Washington, DC: World Bank.DOI: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0669-8. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 IGO
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Cover image: The image on the cover is a segment of a painting by Sue Hoppe, an artist based in SouthAfrica. Titled “Conflict Resolution,” the painting explores the idea that people who seem irreversiblydivided and with little in common can unite if they focus on what they have in common instead of whatdivides them. Hoppe’s work examines war, conflict, and the plight of children and women in Africa, butis also inspired by nature and architecture. To learn more about Sue Hoppe and her work, visit www.southafricanartists.com/home/SueHoppe. Used with permission; further permission required for reuse.
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Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xi
Abbreviations and Acronyms xiii
Executive Summary xv
Overview 1
Part I. Monitoring global development progress 2
Development progress over the MDG period has been impressive 2
Despite solid development gains, signicant work remains 4
Amid an uncertain outlook, stronger effort is needed to grow, invest, and insure 8
Evolving circumstances demand a new approach—enter the SDGs 10
Part II. Development in an era of demographic change 12
Global demography is at a turning point 12
Demographic change may alter the trajectory of global development 14
Effective policies can leverage demographic change within countries 17
Opportunities exist to arbitrage demographic diversity across countries 19
References 22
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Contents
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vi C O N T E N T S G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6
Part I Monitoring Global Development Progress 25
Chapter 1 Ending Extreme Poverty and Sharing Prosperity: Progress and Policies 27
Extreme poverty: Updated numbers and remaining challenges 29
Assessing the incidence of poverty 29
Accounting for poverty’s depth and breadth 35
Aspiring to end poverty by 2030 43
Shared prosperity: Conceptual issues and recent trends 46
Revisiting the concept of shared prosperity 46
Assessing trends in shared prosperity 51
Ending extreme poverty and sharing prosperity: Policy agenda 61
Delineating policy approaches 61
Identifying key policy ingredients 67
Conclusion 77
Notes 78
References 80
Chapter 2 Scaling Up Impact: Transitioning from Millennium to Sustainable Development Goals 87
The Millennium Development Goals: Current status 88
The MDG period saw substantial development progress 88
Synergies across the MDGs have helped progress 91
Progress toward the MDGs has varied greatly 93
A large unnished agenda remains 96
The Sustainable Development Goals: A new approach 98
Changed circumstances demand a new approach 100To accelerate progress, the SDGs can learn from the MDGs 105
Conclusion 110
Notes 110
References 111
Chapter 3 Global Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook: Prospects for Growth 117
Recent developments and short- and medium-term prospects 118
Update on recent macroeconomic policies 123
Quality of macroeconomic policies in low-income countries 126
Long-term convergence and growth trends 127
Conclusion 131
Notes 133
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G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6 C O N T E N T S vii
Part II Development in an Era of Demographic Change 135
Chapter 4 Demographic Change: Disparities, Divergences, and Drivers 137
Characteristics of demographic change 139
Global trends are at a turning point 140
Disparities across countries shape global trends 141
Divergences shift population centers 143Drivers of demographic change 148
Epidemiological trends alter mortality 148
Education, income, and health inuence fertility 152
Spatial contrasts drive migration 155Conclusion 157Notes 158
References 160
Chapter 5 Implications of Demographic Change: Pathways to Prosperity 165From demography to development: A global typology 167
Demographic trends can produce two types of dividends 168
Trends and potential form basis of a new typology 169Challenging starting points 171
Poverty persists in pre- and early-dividend countries 171
Economic dynamism is weakening in late- and post-dividend countries 174
Pathways to future prosperity 176
Rising working-age shares can raise growth 177
Changing demographics can step up development 180
Aging populations are changing what it means to be dependent 180Conclusion 184
Notes 187
References 188
Chapter 6 Policy Priorities in an Era of Demographic Change 191
Leveraging demographic change within countries 194
Sparking demographic transition in pre-dividend countries 194
Accelerating job creation in early-dividend countries 196
Sustaining productivity growth in late-dividend countries 197
Adapting to aging in post-dividend countries 199
Leveraging demographic differences across countries 202Supporting international trade 202
Facilitating legal international migration 208
Encouraging global capital ows 209
Conclusion 211Country Spotlights: Policy challenges at different stages of demographic transition 213
Sparking demographic transition in Niger: Child marriage and fertility 213
Accelerating job creation in Ethiopia: Education, savings, and productivity 214Sustaining productivity growth in Brazil: Savings, labor, and pensions 216
Adapting to aging in Japan: Labor force participation and immigration 217Notes for Country Spotlights 219
Notes 220
References 221
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viii C O N T E N T S G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6
Appendixes 227A. Millennium Development Goals Report Card 229
B. The Role of Multilateral Development Banks: From MDGs to SDGs 247
C. Data sources 263D. Methodology 279
BoxesO.1 Drawing global poverty lines 5
1.1 Global poverty estimates based on 2011 PPP data: Methods and challenges 29
1.2 Why poverty in India could be even lower 34
1.3 Person-equivalent poverty: An intuitive headcount measure that controls for depth 36
1.4 Poverty in Latin America: Income-based versus consumption-based estimates 39
1.5 Multidimensional poverty measurement: E pluribus unum? 40
1.6 The Multidimensional Poverty Index: An example 41
1.7 Back to “Basics”: McNamara’s prescient 1972 speech on shared prosperity 47
1.8 Who is in the B40? 641.9 Chile’s growth-with-equity approach 73
2.1 The MDG process has played a generally positive role in supporting development 97
2.2 What is the relationship between the World Bank Group’s goals and the SDGs? 99
2.3 What gets measured gets done: The importance of data 107
2.4 Mobilizing nancing for development 108
3.1 The effects of demographic factors on potential output 132
4.1 Accuracy and uncertainty in population projections 138
4.2 The legacy of the HIV/AIDS pandemic on southern Africa’s age structure 143
4.3 The demographic transition model 151
4.4 The economic benets of gender equality 153
4.5 Economic and demographic impact of child marriage 155
5.1 Changing concepts of dependency 1665.2 Rapid urbanization presents a development challenge 173
5.3 Making the most out of demographic change 178
5.4 Funding the difference between consumption and production over the life cycle 183
5.5 Current demographic trends could lead to greater greenhouse gas emissions 185
6.1 The impact of demographic change on political economy 192
6.2 Pension system reform: The perspective of European countries 200
6.3 Migration and labor-market-policy reform in high-income countries 201
6.4 Environmental sustainability and demographics 203
6.5 Trade facilitation can help leverage demographic transition 207
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Foreword
deep poverty. This year’s Global Monitor-ing Report presents new and more intuitivemeasures of poverty that allow us to mea-sure depth and help contribute to the policydialogue and action agenda in this urgentarea.
• We have seen progress in achieving sharedprosperity, with a majority of countries reg-istering solid income growth in the poorest40 percent of their income distributions. But
in many countries, the incomes of the bot-tom 40 percent declined, including in halfof the high-income countries. Ensuring thatincome is shared more equitably should bea priority for all countries.
• Poverty reduction and shared prosperityare held back by unequal progress on thenon-income dimensions of development,like access to essential services. We musturgently address the widespread inequali-ties of opportunity in education, health, andother sectors.
The thematic section of this report showsthat advancing these critical challenges willtake place against the background of majordemographic changes. The global populationis growing much slower in 2015 than at thebeginning of the MDG period in 2000. It isalso aging at record speed.
There is significant cross-country hetero-geneity because while some countries still
This is a pivotal year for global development.The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)have guided countries and partners over thelast 15 years in improving the living condi-tions of the poor. We are now transitioning tothe Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),a new set of global targets that embrace eco-nomic, social, and environmental prioritiesthrough 2030.
As we reflect on the hard-fought progress
since the launch of the MDGs, we have anopportunity to make important changes inhow we approach development. We can cel-ebrate that the MDGs mobilized the worldbehind an ambitious agenda, that many coun-tries have reduced poverty and illness, andthat more children today are in school thanever before.
Our mission, however, is far from complete.During the last quarter-century, more than 1billion people have lifted themselves out ofextreme poverty. Yet, about one tenth of the
global population still lives on less than $1.90a day—the updated international poverty line.Looking ahead, three critical challenges
remain:
• A large percentage of the remaining poorare deeply poor, with income levels farbelow the poverty line. Policy action andprograms need to focus more directly onthe men, women, and children that live in
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x F O R E W O R D G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6
maintain young and growing populations,particularly those where global poverty isconcentrated, others are aging, especially the
high- and middle-income countries. Projec-tions for global growth over the SDG periodtrend down in line with the decrease in popu-lation growth, but demographic change canalso be a contributor to growth and develop-ment if the right policies are adopted.
To advance development amid demo-graphic change, we must place our policiesand financing behind three strategic priorities: grow economies in ways that are sustainableand create jobs; invest in people’s social andeconomic potential; and insure against ever-
changing risks, which tend to disproportion-ately impact the poor. These policies will betailored to each country’s demographic profile.
Moreover, the recent European refugee cri-sis only further highlights the importance of
making the best out of demographic change.Whether people migrate for more opportu-nities in life or just a safer life, migration—
together with fertility and mortality—is acritical driver of demographic change. Alongwith capital flows and trade, it is also a keychannel through which mutual benefits can berealized in response to diverse demographictrends across countries. Challenges must bemanaged, but international cooperation is key.
With the right policies in place, demo-graphic change can contribute to the move-ment to end extreme poverty, boost sharedprosperity, and achieve the SDGs. Thisyear’s Global Monitoring Report will help
all countries—rich and poor alike—to navi-gate the challenges and to take advantage ofdemographic change and advance on globaldevelopment goals that will improve livingstandards around the world.
Jim Yong Kim Christine LagardePresident of the Managing Director of theWorld Bank Group International Monetary Fund
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Acknowledgments
This report was prepared jointly by the staffsof the World Bank Group and the Interna-tional Monetary Fund (IMF), with contribu-tions from the following partner institutions:the African Development Bank (AfDB),the Asian Development Bank (ADB), theEuropean Bank for Reconstruction and Devel-opment (EBRD), the Inter-American Develop-ment Bank (IADB), and the Organisation forEconomic Co-operation and Development(OECD). Beyond these institutions, many aca-
demics and consultants also helped make thisreport possible. The contributions of all aregratefully acknowledged.
Philip Schellekens was lead author andmanager of the report, under the guidance ofKaushik Basu (Senior Vice President andWorld Bank Chief Economist), Indermit Gill(Director of Development Policy), and AyhanKose (Director of Development EconomicsProspects Group). The main authors and con-tributors from the World Bank Group were:Syud Amer Ahmed, Vandana Chandra,
Marcio Cruz, Allen Dennis, Christian Eigen-Zucchi, Michele Gragnolati, Hans Lofgren,Maryla Maliszewska, Bryce Quillin, and Ken-neth Simler. Key analytical and data supportwas provided by Pinyi Chen, Huade Huo, JinHo Kim, Csilla Lakatos, Fabian MendezRamos, Eugenia Moran-Suarez, Israel Osorio-Rodarte, and Kevin Kamto Sonke. MarkFelsenthal, Graeme Littler, Bruce Ross-Larsonand Dana Vorisek provided editorial support.
Rosalie Singson Dinglasan managed the desk-top production of the report and handledadministrative aspects, with additional sup-port from Maria Hazel Macadangdang.
The lead author in the IMF was LyngeNielsen, under the guidance of Tam Bayoumi,Rupa Duttagupta, and Sean Nolan. The corecontributors from the IMF were: SibabrataDas, Davide Furceri, Carla Intal, Vimal Tha-koor, John Wakeman-Linn, and Peichu Xie.
The report benefited from the following
principal external contributors. The report’sexternal advisors were James Foster (GeorgeWashington University), Homi Kharas (Brook-ings Institution), Ronald Lee (University ofCalifornia, Berkeley), Andrew Mason (Uni-versity of Hawaii), and Warwick McKibbin(Australian National University). Key contri-butions from partner institutions were madeby: Debra Kertzman, Marie Christine Mon-toya, and Manju Senapaty (ADB); Patricia N.Laverley, Luigi de Pierris, and Adeleke Salami(AfDB); Mandeep Bains and Jasmine Lief
(EBRD); Erin Bautista, Tracy Betts, and AmyMarie Lewis (IADB) and Romina Boarini,Hervé Boulhol, Jean-Christophe Dumont,Lamia Kamal-Chaoui, Fabrice Murtin, AnaLlena Nozal and Shaun Reidy (OECD), whoprovided boxes on pensions reforms andmigration and an update on the OECD’smulti-dimensional living standard measure.
Additional contributions to boxes are fur-thermore acknowledged from the following
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xii A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6
people (all World Bank, except where men-tioned): Lucilla Bruni, Carmen de Paz, AndrewMason (University of Hawaii), Susan
McAdams, Emmanuel Milet (University ofGeneva), Marco Scuriatti, Sara Troiano, andQuentin Wodon. The Global Poverty WorkingGroup provided data and analytical input onextreme poverty and shared prosperity, withspecial thanks to: Raul Andres CastanedaAguilar, Aziz Atamanov, Shaohua Chen, MinhCong Nguyen, Andrew Dabalen, RenoDewina, Carolina Diaz-Bonilla, Francisco H.G. Ferreira, Roy Katayama, Nandini Krish-nan, Leonardo Ramiro Lucchetti, JoseMontes, Rose Mungai, David Locke New-
house, Monica Yanez Pagans, Ana L. Revenga,Prem Sangraula, Liliana D. Sousa, HirokiUematsu, João Pedro Wagner De Azevedo,Christina Wieser, and Nobuo Yoshida. Datasupport on the Maquette for MillenniumDevelopment Goal Simulations (MAMS) forBrazil and Japan was provided by MartinCicowiez (CEDLAS-Universidad Nacional deLa Plata). Dennis Botman (IMF), SebastienDessus, Cornelius Fleischhaker, Edith Kikoni,Lars Moller, Antonio Nucifora, Sergei I.Shatalov, and Quentin Wodon also provided
data and feedback for the MAMS work, whileSaniya Ansar, Leora Klapper, David Reher(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), andRobert Schmidt (University of Richmond)contributed data and feedback on other ana-lytical aspects and simulations. The MDGreport card and other related contributionswere prepared by Mahyar Eshragh-Tabary,Neil Fantom, Juan Feng, Masako Hiraga,Haruna Kashiwase, Buyant Khaltarkhuu,Hiroko Maeda, Umar Serajuddin, RubenaSukaj, Emi Suzuki and Dereje Wolde.
Guidance from the Executive Directors ofthe World Bank and the IMF and their staffduring discussions of the draft report is grate-fully acknowledged. The report also benefitedfrom many useful comments and suggestionsfrom World Bank and IMF management andstaff in the course of preparation and review.
Specific thanks in this respect go to: AhmadAhsan, Jorge A. de Thompson R. Araujo,
Elena Bardasi, Antonella Bassani, KathleenBeegle, Benu Bidani, Moussa Blimpo, Erik A.Bloom, Zeljko Bogetic, Carter J. Brandon,
Bénédicte de la Brière, Javier BronfmanHorovitz, Maurizio Bussolo, César Calderón,Shubham Chaudhuri, Luc Christiaensen,Fionna Douglas, Roberto Echandi, Sidney J.Edelmann, David Evans, Tim Evans, CorneliusFleischhaker, Alan Fuchs, Emanuela Galasso,Franck O. Gbaguidi, Frederico Gil Sander,Caren Grown, Stephane Guimbert, LuciaHanmer, Phillip J. Hay, Yumeka Hirano,Monika Huppi, Elena Ianchovichina, MalathiS. Jayawickrama, Dean M. Jolliffe, AndyKotikula, Nicole Klingen, Aart C. Kraay,
Megumi Kubota, Thomas Laursen, KihoonLee, Xue Li, Peter Kusek, Samira Lindner,Audrey Liounis, Gladys Lopez-Acevedo, Luis-Felipe Lopez-Calva, Leonardo Lucchetti,Mattia Makovec, Bill Maloney, Eliana R.Matulevich, Cristina Mejía, SteisianasariMileiva, Rinku Murgai, Raj Nallari, AmbarNarayan, Mario Negre, Antonio Nucifora,Philip O’Keefe, Eko Pambudi, Samuel Pienk-nagura, Alberto Portugal, Sonia Plaza, EspenB. Prydz, Martin Rama, Dilip Ratha, MicheleRuta, Imam Setiawan, Sudhir Shetty, Joana
Silva, Carlos Silva-Jauregui, Hoon S. Soh,Sebastian Stolorz, Lynne Sherburne-Benz,Xiaolun Sun, Marvin Taylor-Dormond, HansTimmer, Augusto de la Torre, Matthew WaiPoi, Jan Walliser, Bagus A. Wirapati, Liang Yu,Qinghua Zhao.
The World Bank’s Publishing and Knowl-edge Unit managed editorial services, design,production, and printing of the report, withSusan Graham and Kia Penso as the produc-tion editing team. Others who assisted withthe report’s publication included Denise
Bergeron, Aziz Gökdemir, Patricia Katayama,Nancy Lammers, and Stephen McGroarty.Marta Gottron copy-edited the report. Thereport’s dissemination and outreach werecoordinated by Phillip J. Hay, working withMark Felsenthal, Vamsee K. Kanchi, andMikael E. Reventar. Graeme Littler and Kath-erine Rollins provided web support.
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Abbreviations and Acronyms
ADB Asian Development Bank
AEs advanced economies
AfDB African Development Bank
AIDS acquired immune deficiencysyndrome
B10 bottom 10 percent
B20 bottom 20 percent
B40 bottom 40 percent
CIS Commonwealth of IndependentStates
CO2 carbon dioxide
CPR contraceptive prevalence rate
DAC Development AssistanceCommittee
EM emerging market
EMDCs emerging market anddeveloping countries
EU European Union
FCS fragile and conflict-affectedstates
FDI foreign direct investment
G20 Group of 20
GDP gross domestic product
GMR Global Monitoring Report
HIV human immunodeficiency virus
IDA International Development
AssociationIDP internally displaced persons
IMF International Monetary Fund
LIDCs low-income developingcountries
MDGs Millennium DevelopmentGoals
MFN most favored nation
MMR maternal mortality rate
NTA National Transfer Accountsproject
ODA official development assistance
OECD Organisation for EconomicCo-operation and Development
PISA Programme for InternationalStudent Assessment
PPP purchasing power parity
SDGs Sustainable Development Goals
T10 top 10 percent
T20 top 20 percent
T60 top 60 percent
TDR total dependency ratio
TFP total factor productivity
TFR total fertility rateUN United Nations
UNAIDS Joint United NationsProgramme on HIV/AIDS
UNCTAD United Nations Conference onTrade and Development
UNDP United Nations DevelopmentProgramme
UNESCO United Nations Educational,Scientific and CulturalOrganization
UNFCC United Nations FrameworkConvention on Climate Change
UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund
UNPD United Nations PopulationDivision
WEO World Economic Outlook
WHO World Health Organization
WTO World Trade Organization
G L O B A L M O N I T O R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 5 / 2 0 1 6 xiii
All dollar amounts are U.S. dollars unless otherwise indicated.
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Executive Summary
With 2015 marking the transition from theMillennium to the Sustainable DevelopmentGoals, the international community can cele-brate many development successes since 2000.Despite the global financial crisis, economicgrowth was generally strong and robust.About 1 billion people rose out of extremepoverty. Most developing countries saw solidincome growth for the bottom 40 percent oftheir income distribution. Millions of childrenwho were unlikely to survive their fifth birth-
day passed beyond these critical years andwent on to school in ever greater numbers.The incidence of preventable diseases such asAIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis is falling. Theshare of those with access to clean water andbetter sanitation has risen. Overall, the Mil-lennium Development Goals played an impor-tant role in galvanizing the global developmentcommunity, and that experience will helpdrive progress toward achievement of the Sus-tainable Development Goals by 2030.
Despite solid development gains, progress
has been uneven, and significant work remains.With an estimated 900 million people in 2012living on less than $1.90 a day—the updatedinternational poverty line—and a projected700 million in 2015, extreme poverty remainsunacceptably high. It has also become moreconcentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and SouthAsia. Addressing moderate poverty and miti-gating the vulnerability of falling back into
poverty have become more pressing issues inmany countries, including in those where thebottom 40 percent saw their incomes decline.Even in a world of single-digit extreme pov-erty, non-income disparities, such as limitedaccess to quality education and health services,pose a bottleneck to sustained poverty reduc-tion and shared prosperity. Wider environ-mental sustainability concerns are a majorchallenge throughout the world, in regard toclimate change and its impact on the natural
resources upon which many of the poorestdepend, such as water. In sum, while develop-ment progress was impressive, it has beenuneven and a large unfinished agenda remains.
Three key challenges stand out: the depthof remaining poverty, the unevenness in sharedprosperity, and the persistent disparities innon-income dimensions of development. First,the policy discourse needs to focus moredirectly on the poorest among the poor. Whilepockets of ultra-poverty exist around theworld, Sub-Saharan Africa is home to most
of the deeply poor. To make depth a morecentral element in policy formulation, easy-to-communicate measures are needed—and thisreport attempts a step in this direction withperson-equivalent measures of poverty. Sec-ond, the eradication of poverty in all of itsforms requires steady growth of the incomesof the bottom 40 percent. Yet, economicgrowth—a key driver of shared prosperity—
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may not be as buoyant as it was before theglobal financial crisis. Third, unequal progressin non-income dimensions of development
requires addressing widespread inequality ofopportunity, which transmits poverty acrossgenerations and erodes the pace and sustain-ability of progress for the bottom 40. To meetthese challenges, three ingredients are core tothe policy agenda: sustaining broad-basedgrowth, investing in human development, andinsuring the poor and vulnerable againstemerging risks.
In view of these challenges, the SustainableDevelopment Goals aim to scale up impact ina changing world through a more integrated
approach to development. Recognizing theinterconnections between development objec-tives, the SDGs embrace an ambitious andholistic vision to foster inclusive and sustain-able development with scaled-up impact.Shared by all countries, they recognize thatcollective action is required. Global chal-lenges—resilient financial systems, commonresources, climate change—require interna-tionally coordinated solutions. Meeting SDGinvestment needs will depend on shifting from“billions” in official development assistance to
“trillions” in investments of all kinds, unlock-ing, leveraging, and catalyzing public and pri-vate resources. The SDGs will need to bepursued in a changing world, with new oppor-tunities and challenges brought by evolvingmegatrends, including climate change, contin-ued globalization, rapid urbanization, and, asdiscussed in the special theme of this report,demographic change.
Profound changes in global demographyhave the potential to alter the trajectory ofglobal development over the SDG period.
Global demography is at a turning point: theworld’s population is growing more slowlyand is aging at an unprecedented rate. Thesetrends reflect past development successes—women’s empowerment, improved education,better child, maternal and reproductive health,and increased longevity. The working-ageshare of the population peaked in 2012 and isnow on the decline. Aging means that popula-tion increases are reflected in larger numbersof older people. The global count of children
is stabilizing at a plateau of 2 billion. Yet,underneath these global trends lies consider-able diversity in the direction and pace of
demographic change. Regional and subre-gional patterns vary across and within coun-tries. To frame the impact of diversedemographic trends on development acrosscountries, this report lays out a new typologyof demographic change, applied to the latest2015 UN population statistics.
The diversity of demographic change at thecountry level presents unique opportunitiesand challenges to the world’s centers of globalpoverty and engines of global growth. Morethan 90 percent of poverty is concentrated in
pre- and early-dividend countries with swell-ing working-age populations that lag in keyhuman development indicators and continueto register rapid population growth. In thesecountries, the demographic transition to lowerfertility creates a golden opportunity to raiseliving standards. Over 85 percent of globaleconomic activity and 78 percent of globalgrowth over the last 15 years can be attributedto late- and post-dividend countries, whichhave much-lower fertility rates and some of thehighest shares of the elderly in the world. In
these countries, population aging may weakengrowth prospects. To be sure, demographicchange is not inherently good or bad and pres-ents opportunities and challenges everywhere.In each case, policies can make a critical differ-ence in how demographic change affects prog-ress toward the development goals.
Navigating the dynamic implications ofdemographic change will require sound poli-cies informed by a long-run perspective andtailored to a nation’s demographic context. Toeradicate persistent poverty, the centers of
global poverty need to accelerate their demo-graphic transition, invest in their young andstill-growing populations, and lay the founda-tions for sustained growth. Among other pol-icy initiatives, these goals require bettereducation and health services, as well as greaterempowerment of women. Facing weakeningeconomic dynamism, the lower-fertility, richercountries that make up the current engines ofglobal growth need to address headwinds aris-ing from shrinking labor forces. They also
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need to adapt their policies and institutions tofoster healthy and productive aging. Selectedpolicy priorities include mobilizing savings for
productive investment in human and physicalcapital, as well as strengthening welfare sys-tems—pensions, health care, and long-termcare—while ensuring fiscal sustainability andprotection for the elderly and vulnerable.
Policy opportunities also exist to arbitragedemographic diversity across countries. Theextent of demographic diversity across coun-tries is starker than ever, with large and inevi-table impacts on the global economy. Returnson capital and labor are affected. Comparativeadvantages in trade are altered. Given these
implications, flows of capital, labor and goodsand services will be affected and, together, theycan help respond to growing demographicimbalances globally. Mutual benefits can berealized: capital can flow to rising consumermarkets; older countries can benefit from legal
immigration; younger countries can producelabor-intensive products. But challenges needto be managed and international cooperation
is key.With effective policies, this era of intense
demographic change may herald a period ofsustained development progress. Globaldemography is changing and has the potentialto alter the trajectory of global developmentprofoundly. To speed up progress, countriesneed to step up efforts to sustain broad-basedgrowth, invest in people, and insure the poorand vulnerable against ever-changing risks.However, they must undertake these measuresby taking into account demographic change.
Where possible, this requires capturing andharnessing demographic dividends. Elsewhere,it requires adaptation. Everywhere, it calls forturning demographic change into one of themost consequential development opportuni-ties of our times.
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Projections show that the global povertyrate may have fallen to single digits in 2015.Yet, the number of poor remains high.
While income poverty fell rapidly during theMDG-era, a large unnished agenda remainsfor the SDGs with respect to non-income goals.
With extreme poverty concentrating inSub-Saharan Africa, more focus is neededon the poorest among the poor.
Prosperity needs to be better shared with thebottom 40 percent of the income distribution,especially in high-income countries.
With less buoyant growth expected at thestart of the SDG period, increased effort isneeded to sustain broad-based growth.
We need to invest in people and protect themfrom risk with adequate human developmentpolicies and social protection.
MONITORING GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRESS: A SNAPSHOT
1,959
1,751
983897
702
37.1
29.1
14.112.7
9.6
0
5
10
15
20
2530
35
40
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
1990 1999 2011 2012 2015a
G l o b a l p o v e r t y r a t e
( % )
G l o b a l n u m b e r o f p o o r ( m i l l i o n s )
Number of poor (left axis) Poverty rate (right axis)
Note: Based on the $1.90 poverty line an d 2011 PPP.a. Forecast.
Note: Based on the $1.90 poverty line an d 2011 PPP.a. Forecast.
Note: Based on the $1.25 poverty lin e and 2005 PPP. Extreme pover ty (< $1.25 a day),moderate pover ty ($1.25–$4), vulnerability ($4–$10), middle class and r ich (> $10).
Sources: PovcalNet (2015), World Bank Global Database for Shared Prosperity, World Economic Outlook.
36
67
15
6
38
40
35
71
58
40
88
77
34
40
52
27
Improved sanitation facilities access
Number of countries (out of 145)
Improved water source access
Maternal mortality ratio
Infant mortality rate
Under-5 mortality ratePrimary school completion rate
Prevalence of undernourishment
Extreme income poverty
Target met Sufficient progress (before 2015)Insufficient progress (2015–20) Moderately off target (2020–30)Seriously off target (after 2030) Insufficient data
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
1990 1999 2011 2012 2015a
East Asia and Pacic
S h a r e o f g l o b a l p o v e r t y ( % )
Sub-Saharan AfricaSouth AsiaRest of the world
N u m b e r o f c o u n t r i e s
0
10
20
30
40
Low-income
countries
Lower-middle-
income
countries
Upper-middle-
income
countries
High-income
countries
Positive income growth for the bottom 40%Negative income growth for the bottom 40%
4
5
717
22 19
17
3
Advancedeconomies
Low-incomedeveloping countries
Emerging marketcountries
–5
–4
–3
–2
–1
0
12
3
4
5
Projected
2001 2005 2010 2015 2020
G D P p e r c a p i t a g r o w t h ,
m e d i a n c o u n t r y ( % c h
a n g e )
Extremely poor Moderately poor
Vulnerable Middle class and rich
0 20 40 60 80 100
1 2 3 c o u n t r i e s
Bottom40 percent
Income status at each percentile, 2011
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countries in earlier stages of demographictransition to lower fertility levels and longerlife expectancy, making them the focus of the
continuing battle against global poverty.Demographic change brings unique oppor-
tunities and challenges to further the post-2015 development goals. But countries havevery different starting lines and face starkdifferences in demographic characteristicsand projected trends. The way forward, asunderpinned by the SDGs, is a more synergis-tic approach between the various dimensionsof development. Three ingredients will framethe policy agenda: sustainable broad-basedgrowth, investment in human development,
and measures that insure the poor and vul-nerable against evolving risks. These strate-gies must be sensitive to demographics. Thecenters of global poverty need to acceleratetheir demographic transition, invest in theiryoung and growing populations, and lay thefoundations for sustained growth to capturedemographic dividends. The engines of globalgrowth need to address headwinds arisingfrom shrinking labor forces and adapt theirpolicies and institutions to foster healthy andproductive aging. In addition, to eradicate
poverty and invigorate economic dynamism,all countries must also grasp the opportuni-ties and manage the challenges that arisefrom demographic imbalances at the globallevel—through capital flows, migration, andtrade. With the right set of policies, this eraof intense demographic change can be turnedinto one of sustained development progress.
Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016investigates these issues in two parts:
Part I—the global monitoring part—examines global development progress, the
unfinished agenda, and the policy opportuni-ties looking ahead. Chapter 1 examines theprogress made on sustainable poverty reduc-tion and shared prosperity, as well as the pol-icies that are needed to make further prog-ress. With 2015 being a watershed year forglobal development goals, Chapter 2 reviewsthe development successes during the MDGperiod and examines the unfinished agendaleft for the SDGs. Chapter 3 assesses the
macroeconomic performance over the MDGperiod, provides the near- and medium-termoutlook, and examines what the world might
be like in 2030.Part II—the thematic part—examines how
demographic change can be tilted in favorof the development goals. Chapter 4 char-acterizes demographic change at the global,regional, and country level. It also examinesthe drivers of demographic change that haveshaped the diversity of demographic patternsand trends. Chapter 5 examines how demog-raphy affects development. It develops a newglobal typology that ties demographic changeto development potential and analyzes the
various pathways through which demographicchange affects the prosperity of nations.Chapter 6 analyzes how policies can leveragedemographic change in support of the devel-opment goals. It examines policy opportuni-ties at both the country and the global level.
Part I: Monitoring globaldevelopment progress
Development progress over theMDG period has been impressive
In many ways, development has advancedmore rapidly over the 15-year MDG era thanat any other time in human history. Since thelaunch of the MDGs, economic growth hasbeen rapid, aided by strong commodity pricesand generally improved macroeconomic poli-cies. Poverty reduction also has been rapid,particularly in East Asia and the Pacific. Mil-lions of children who were unlikely to surviveto their fifth birthday have passed beyondthese critical years and gone on to school
in ever greater numbers, including manymore girls than was the case 15 years ago.The incidence of preventable diseases suchas acquired immunodeficiency syndrome(AIDS), malaria, and tuberculosis is falling,and the share of people with access to cleanwater and better sanitation has risen mark-edly. The MDGs helped frame the broadergoals of development and build a coalition ofpartners to work toward common goals.
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One of the most remarkable achievementsduring the MDG era was the significantdecline in the share of the extremely poor
in the global population. The first MDGtarget—cutting the extreme poverty rate tohalf its 1990 level by 2015—was met fiveyears ahead of schedule. Poverty was on thedecline before the MDG period, but progresswas fastest in the 2000s (figures O.1a, O.1b).Particularly notable are the substantial reduc-tions in poverty in East Asia and the Pacificand South Asia, where the rapid growthand development of China and India helped
lift millions of people out of poverty (fig-ures O.1c and O.1d). As the number of poordeclined, the average shortfall of income
below the poverty line improved as well from13.1 percent in 1990 to 3.7 by 2012.
Based on the updated poverty line of$1.90 a day, the estimate for 2012 puts thenumber of extremely poor people at about900 million, or 12.7 percent of global popu-lation (table O.1). Global poverty estimateshave been updated to reflect a re-estimatedinternational poverty line of $1.90 a day, new2011-based purchasing power parity (PPP)
FIGURE O.1 Global poverty declined, but Sub-Saharan Africa lagged
Source: PovcalNet 2015.Note: Estimates based on the $1.90 poverty line and 2011 PPP prices.a. Given the production lags for household surveys, 2012 is the latest year for which the World Bank is able to produce regional and global poverty estimates. All numbers for 2015and beyond are statistical projections based on growth scenarios and distributional assumptions, and should be treated with considerable circumspection.b. Regional aggregates for the Middle East and North Africa are omitted because of lack of suffi cient observations.
1,9591,751
983 897702
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
1990 19992011
2012 2015a
N u m b e r o f p o o r p e o p l e ( m i l l i o n s )
b. Extreme poverty is less than half its 1990 level
37.1
29.1
14.1 12.79.6
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1990 1999 2011 2012 2015
a
P o v e r t y r a t e ( % )
a. The global poverty rate declined considerably
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Europeand
CentralAsia
LatinAmericaand the
Caribbean
SouthAsia
Sub-SaharanAfrica
WorldEast Asiaand thePacic
1990 1999 2011 2012 2015b
d. The poverty rate remains high in Sub-Saharan Africab
P o v e r t y r a t e ( % )
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
1990 1999 2011 2012 2015a
Rest of the world
World
South AsiaTop 3 regionsSub-Saharan Africa
East Asia and Pacic
c. The number of extremely poor declined everywhere,
including most recently in Sub-Saharan Africa
N u m
b e r o f p o o r p e o p l e ( m i l l i o n s )
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prices, and revisions to complementary data(box O.1). The 2012 estimate represents con-tinued progress in poverty reduction as therevised headcount in 2011 was 983 millionpeople (14.1 percent of global population).Comparison between 2011 and 2012 revealsa modest decline in the number of poor inSub-Saharan Africa, potentially heralding anera of poverty reduction not just in the shareof the poor but also in their absolute number.
Although the estimate for 2012 remainsthe most reliable recent estimate, World Bank
projections suggest that global poverty mayhave reached 700 million, or 9.6 percent ofglobal population, in 2015. For the first time,the global extreme poverty rate may havereached single digits. The projected declinebetween 2012 and 2015 is 200 million peo-ple (some 80 million in South Asia, about65 million in East Asia and the Pacific, andclose to 40 million in Sub-Saharan Africa).This projection is extrapolated from 2012based on growth scenarios and distributionalassumptions. Given that the collection and
processing of nationally representative house-hold surveys—on which actual poverty esti-mates are based—usually takes two to threeyears, the 2012 number remains the mostreliable recent estimate.
Turning to broader segments of the popu-lation, the Bottom 40 percent (B40) of theincome distribution in many countries hasseen rising incomes over the past decade,yet progress was unequal. Considering five-year periods starting around 2007 and end-ing around 2012, B40 incomes grew in 65 of
the 94 countries with adequate and com-parable household data. Among them, 47countries registered a “shared prosperitypremium,” meaning that B40 incomes grewfaster than the incomes of the average pop-ulation (figure O.2). This premium rangedfrom less than 1 percentage point to wellabove 3 points, suggesting that growth inmany countries has been considerably pro-poor. Progress on shared prosperity wasespecially significant in middle-income coun-tries, where some 85 percent of countries
TABLE O.1 Global poverty is assessed with the re-estimated poverty line
Historical Headline Projection
Region 1990 1999 2011 2012 2015a
Share of population below $1.90 a day (2011 PPP) (%)
East Asia and Pacific 60.6 37.5 8.5 7.2 4.1
Europe and Central Asia 1.9 7.8 2.4 2.1 1.7
Latin America and the Caribbean 17.8 13.9 5.9 5.6 5.6
Middle East and North Africab — — — — —
South Asia 50.6 41.8 22.2 18.8 13.5
Sub-Saharan Africa 56.8 58.0 44.4 42.7 35.2
Developing world 44.4 34.3 16.5 14.9 11.9
World 37.1 29.1 14.1 12.7 9.6
Millions of people below $1.90 a day (2011 PPP)
East Asia and Pacific 995.5 689.4 173.1 147.2 82.6
Europe and Central Asia 8.8 36.8 11.4 10.1 4.4
Latin America and the Caribbean 78.2 71.1 35.3 33.7 29.7Middle East and North Africab — — — — —
South Asia 574.6 568.0 361.7 309.2 231.3
Sub-Saharan Africa 287.6 374.6 393.6 388.8 347.1
World 1,958.6 1,751.5 983.3 896.7 702.1
Source: PovcalNet 2015.Note: Poverty estimates base d on the $1.90 poverty line and 2011 purchasing power parity (PPP) prices. Box O.1 explains how the global povertyestimates were calculated. Regional aggregates for the Middle East and North Af rica are omitte d because of lack of suffi cient observations.a. Given the production lags for household surveys, 2012 is the latest year for which the World Bank is able to produce regional and global
poverty estimates. All numbers for 2015 and beyond are statistical projections based on growth scenarios and distributional assumptions,and should be treated with considerable circumspection.
b. Even though five countries in the Middle East and North Africa region are omitted from the database of country-level povert y estimates,poverty estimates for these countries are calculated for the purposes of global poverty estimation (see box O.1). The 2011 and 2012 povertyestimates for this region implied by these global estimates are 2.5 and 2.3 percent, respectively.
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BOX O.1 Drawing global poverty lines
Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016 unveils povertydata based on a new $1.90 international poverty line,using 2011 purchasing power parity (PPP). To be com-parable, the global poverty estimates are based on acommon poverty line across all countries. As with theprevious line of $1.25 a day, in 2005 prices, the newline is calculated by averaging the national povertylines of the 15 poorest developing countries. It repre-sents a very low threshold standard of living which isbelieved to correspond to the minimum costs of basicneeds. Changes in this value over time thus reflect the
increasing cost of obtaining these basic needs.A key driver behind the raising of the internationalpoverty line to $1.90 is the release of the 2011 PPPindex. Cross-country comparisons of poverty ratesrequire PPP indexes, produced by the InternationalComparison Program. New rounds of PPP indexesestimate the cost of living across countries and pro-vide price data for countries not covered by previousrounds. Introducing new PPPs typically require there-estimation of the international poverty line andcan involve, in some cases, significant changes in our
understanding of poverty levels in some countries orthe relative ranking of poverty across countries.
Including this year’s revision, there have been fourmajor changes to the World Bank Group’s estimateof the international poverty line, reflecting differentmethodologies and PPP indexes. The revisions to PPPindexes in 1985, 1993, and 2005 corresponded topoverty lines of $1.01, $1.08, and $1.25, respectively.Different methods have been followed to estimatethese lines. Beginning with the $1.25 line, the pov-erty line was calculated by taking the average of the
15 poorest countries (Chad, Ethiopia, The Gambia,Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique,Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, Tan-zania, and Uganda).a This same practice was followedfor the $1.90 revision.
a. The list of the 15 poorest countries used to estimatethe $1.25 poverty line based on the 2005 PPP, as describedin Ravallion, Chen, and Sangraula (2009), does not nec-essarily represent the current 15 poorest countries in theworld. Some of the countries originally included in this listmay have made significant progress.
in the sample registered an increase in B40incomes. Among developing regions, LatinAmerica and the Caribbean performedremarkably well.
The evidence suggests that most of the vari-ation in B40 income growth can be explainedby growth in average incomes for the entirepopulation. Over long periods of time (severaldecades), B40 income growth closely tracksaverage income growth. Historical data for151 high-income and developing countries
shows that average income growth was theprimary explanation for cross-country andover-time variations in B40 income growth.Yet, average income growth does not providethe only explanation. Changes in the incomeshare of the B40 played an increased roleespecially during the 2000s, a period of par-ticularly fast income growth for the B40. Italso appears that for lower-income countries,as well as for the lower deciles of the incomedistribution in any country, average incomegrowth offers diminished explanatory power.
Despite solid development gains,signicant work remains
A first key challenge is the depth of poverty,especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. The declinein poverty rates has been impressive. Yet, pov-erty still remains unacceptably high—around900 million extremely poor people in 2012and a projected 700 million people in 2015.It is also becoming increasingly concentratedin Sub-Saharan Africa. Over the last decades,
the vast majority (about 95 percent) of globalpoverty has been concentrated in threeregions: East Asia and the Pacific, South Asia,and Sub-Saharan Africa (figure O.1c). Overtime, the composition of global poverty acrossthese three regions has shifted dramatically.East Asia and the Pacific registered a spectac-ular decline. South Asia saw an initial increaseand a later decline, with rates remaining high.Sub-Saharan Africa saw a steady increase inits share and was home to 43 percent of theglobal poor in 2012. The growing global
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share of Sub-Saharan Africa reflects slowerpoverty reduction there amid rapid popula-tion growth: in 2012 the region’s povertyrate stood at 42.7 percent, which is only 14.1points lower than in 1990 (figure O.1d).
The policy discourse needs to focus morefully on the poorest among the poor. Povertyheadcount statistics present distorted viewsof the spatial distribution of poverty and thepace of progress over time. Two countries
FIGURE O.2 Experiences on shared prosperity differ: While the majority of countries have seen solid growth inB40 incomes, many countries have not
Annualized B40 income growth (bars with no black outline) and average population income growth (shown with a black outline) for a five-year period,
circa 2007–12 (%)
Source: World Bank Global Database for Shared Prosperity.Note: Data availability varies across countries. Shared prosperity estimates are provided only for comparable survey years. In Sub-Saharan Africa, only 16 of the 48 countries haveshared prosperity numbers even though more survey years exist. Starting points are about 2007 and end points are about 2012. B40 = Bottom 40 percent.
Bottom 40%
East Asia and Pacic Europe and Central Asia High-income countries
Latin Amer ica an d the Caribbean Middle East and Nor th Africa Sou th Asia Sub− Saharan Africa
Total Population
All available countries
P h i l i p
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could record the same poverty headcountrate, where in one country poverty is shallowand in the other it is very deep. Similarly, a
country may be successful in lifting its poor-est citizens—the poorest of the poor—fromabject poverty to a level just below the pov-erty line. Such improvement would not showup in a poverty headcount measure. Measuresthat account for depth, such as the “povertygap” (shortfall from the poverty line), are notas simple to grasp as headcount measures. Tomake “depth” a more central element of pol-icy formulation, easy-to-communicate mea-sures are needed—and this report attempts astep in this direction with the new “person-
equivalent” approach. It finds that, in person-equivalent terms (a benchmark poor personwith a typical income shortfall), the pov-erty headcount ratio in Sub-Saharan Africafor 2012 rises from 42.7 to 46.7 percent,whereas that for South Asia falls from 18.8 to10.6 percent.
With extreme poverty on the decline glob-ally, a second key challenge is the uneven-ness in shared prosperity for the B40. The
B40 may include many possible populations.Among developing regions, the income of therichest person among the B40 makes thatperson either extremely or moderately poor,particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa and partsof East Asia, or vulnerable, primarily in LatinAmerica and the Caribbean and parts ofEurope and Central Asia (Map O.1). In coun-tries where reducing poverty and vulnerabilityis key, the shared prosperity focus on the B40thus enhances that focus. Among richer coun-tries, the B40 may encompass the relatively
poor. Promoting healthy B40 income growthrepresents an ongoing challenge, as well as anopportunity to make the development processmore inclusive and socially sustainable.
In many countries, stepped-up effort isneeded to sustainably build shared prosper-ity. The latest comparable household data
MAP O.1 The income of the richest person in the bottom 40 percent differs greatly across countries
Source: PovcalNet database 2015.Note: Based on the $1.25 poverty line and 2005 purchasing power parity (PPP) prices, as full distributional data using 2011 PPP pricees was not yet available.
IBRD 41778
AUGUST 2015
Extreme poor (< $1.25 a day)
Moderate poor ($1.25–$4 a day)
Vulnerable ($4–$10 a day)
Middle class and rich (> $10 a day)
No dataThis map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank.The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other informationshown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group,anyjudgment onthelegal statusof anyterritory,orany endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.
GSDPMMap DesignUnit
Income distribution, 2011
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points to a decline in the growth of B40incomes over the period circa 2007−12. Halfof the high-income countries and more than a
third of low-income countries saw an actualoutright decline in B40 incomes. The UnitedStates saw a decline in B40 incomes duringthe 2000s, perpetuating a trend of risinginequality between B40 and the rest of thepopulation—a trend observed in several otherhigh-income countries and exacerbated by theglobal financial crisis. Indeed, compared withthe earlier period circa 2006−11—as reportedin Global Monitoring Report 2014/2015—the latest shared prosperity data suggest asignificant deterioration. For countries with
consistent time series, average B40 incomegrowth slowed from 4.6 to 2.9 percent,whereas average income growth for the entirepopulation declined from 3.0 to 1.7 percent.
A third key challenge relates to the per-sistent disparities in the non-income dimen-sions of development. Compared with theMDG goal on income poverty, non-incomegoals saw more mixed success. Progress fellparticularly short for targets related to health(maternal and infant mortality), nutrition(undernourishment and hunger), and sani-
tation (Kenny and Dykstra 2013). Close toone-fifth of all children under five remainundernourished, and some 860 millionpeople continue to live in slums. Access toprimary school education and literacy rateshave improved, yet the quality of educationremains a concern. Moreover, while the tidehas turned on the incidence of major deadlydiseases, a high number of preventable deathspersist. With the development of new medi-cines, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)patients receiving treatment have nearly the
same life expectancy as those without HIV.However, three-fifths of those people livingwith HIV, mostly in developing countries,lack access to antiretroviral drugs. Tubercu-losis killed 1.5 million people in 2013, manyin the prime of their productive lives. An esti-mated 198 million cases of malaria were reg-istered in 2013, claiming the lives of about453,000 children.
In addition, little progress has been madein improving the long-term environmental
sustainability of development. Althoughsome countries have successfully “delinked”trends in environmental degradation from
growth, most have not. The cost of environ-mental degradation—externalities associatedwith outdoor and indoor air pollution, waterpollution, deforestation, carbon emissions,and other environmental hazards—rose 50percent during 1990−2010. Furthermore,in 2013, over 5 billion people in developingcountries were breathing polluted air withconcentrations of PM2.5 in excess of theguideline levels recommended by the WorldHealth Organization, up 42 percent since1990 (Brauer et al. 2015). In 2010, between
11 and 21 percent of all deaths in develop-ing countries were the result of pollution andother environmental risk factors. Only about25 percent of the countries in the world, pri-marily high-income countries, have managedto grow economically while simultaneouslydecreasing their environmental externali-ties. Even fewer have managed to delinkcarbon emissions from growth, challengingthe world’s ability to contain the impacts offuture climate change to agreed-upon levels ofacceptability.
To sustainably end extreme poverty andpromote shared prosperity, more attentionis needed to the non-income dimensions ofdevelopment. First, to “end poverty in all of itsforms everywhere,” it must be recognized thatpoverty is multidimensional. Income povertyis typically accompanied by inadequate accessto education, health, housing, employment,and personal security—areas where improve-ments would increase the chances for escapingpoverty. Second, the B40 consistently under-perform in non-income dimensions. Children
from B40 households are more likely to diebefore age five than children in the top 60percent (T60) households and are also morelikely to be underweight. Access to improvedwater sources (piped water) and technol-ogy (the Internet) is uneven, too. Despiterising enrollment rates in poorer countries,access to primary education remains inequi-tably low. Third, greater efforts are neededto monitor the sustainability of developmentprogress in its economic, environmental, and
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social aspects. Environmental sustainabil-ity concerns, particularly regarding naturalresources, environmental health, and ecosys-
tem sustainability, need to enter more fullyinto economic decision making.
Amid an uncertain outlook, strongereffort is needed to grow, invest, andinsure
Sustained economic growth has been thekey building block of poverty reduction andshared prosperity during the MDG era. Afterthe launch of the MDGs in 2000 until theglobal financial crisis in 2009, developing
economies grew on average by 6.6 percenta year, compared with just over 2 percent ayear in advanced economies. Even during thedepth of the financial crisis and its immediateaftermath, developing economies grew by 5.5percent, while advanced economies stalled.Moreover, this strong economic expansionwas accompanied by greater income conver-gence. The global Gini coefficient—a mea-sure of inequality in income distribution—declined. The global per capita distributionof income exhibited greater global income
convergence during 2000−15, in part thanksto rapid income growth in major economieslike China and India.
Economic growth is expected to be lessbuoyant in the period ahead. Global growthis expected to trend down somewhat in2016–30 relative to the MDG period. Thisslowing may reflect weaker levels of invest-ment and the gradually diminishing growthdividends from information and communi-cation technology. Moreover, demographictrends in major advanced and emerging
markets could be a drag on economy-widegrowth—even if they also present significantopportunities to raise living standards. Lowergrowth prospects threaten the income conver-gence of developing and high-income econo-mies. Developing economies require stronggrowth to support the hard-won gains of theMDG era. Looking ahead, a number of risksremain as geopolitical tensions, the tighteningof financial conditions, and lower commodityprices present sources of uncertainty.
Economic growth may not transmit intopoverty reduction as easily as in the past.First, with global poverty at 37.1 percent
in 1990, many poor people were just belowthe poverty line, leading to a large percent-age point reduction in poverty for a given(distribution-neutral) increase in householdincome growth. Now that the headline rate is12.7 percent (latest most reliable estimate for2012), the same distribution-neutral increasein GDP is unlikely to produce as much povertyreduction since comparatively more peoplewill be situated in the lower end of the incomedistribution. Second, the deepest pockets ofpoverty may be less readily reached through
growth as many of the remaining poor live innarrowly diversified natural-resource-basedeconomies and fragile and conflict-affectedstates. Poverty is less responsive to growthin such economies because the availabilityof jobs—the main channel through whichgrowth uplifts the poor—is more limited.Capital-intensive, natural-resource sectorsmay generate growth but are likely to haveweaker linkages to job creation.
Given the unfinished agenda and theuncertain outlook, additional efforts are
needed to promote broad-based growth,investment in people, and insurance againstrisks. These three priorities require a strategythat promotes competitive economies andstable business environments, thus ensur-ing broad-based growth and income-earningopportunities to benefit the poor and theB40. Investment in human development isneeded to tackle non-income deprivations andinequalities of opportunity so that these samegroups can gain the capacity to benefit fromand contribute to economic growth and pros-
perity (Fryer and Levitt 2004; Paxson andSchady 2007). And robust insurance mecha-nisms are required so that people—althoughnot necessarily jobs, firms, or industries—areprotected against evolving risks for individu-als, nations, and the world, all in the spirit ofnurturing a competitive economy and foster-ing an inclusive society.
An environment that fosters sustainablegrowth—the first big priority—is complex.Among economies that have sustained growth
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for extended periods, five characteristics arekey (figure O.3): effective leadership and gov-ernance; macroeconomic stability so marketswork; a market orientation to guide structuralchange; an outward orientation to achievescale and impose discipline; and a future ori-entation to boost savings and meet investmentneeds (Commission on Growth and Develop-ment 2008). Sustained growth can bite deep
into poverty and contribute to shared pros-perity, but for that to happen it must createjobs (Gill and Revenga forthcoming). Growthis most effective in reaching low-income peo-ple when it leads to productive employment.Policy makers must be mindful of the impactsof job creation and income growth on theextreme poor and the B40. That will requireattention not only to the pace of economicgrowth but also to its pattern.
To leverage human resources to their full-est potential—the second priority—focused
investment is needed in human development.The capacity of households to promote theirwell-being depends on the assets they control,the returns on these assets, and how inten-sively the assets can be used. Human capitalassets have both intrinsic value (contributingto a person’s well-being) and instrumentalvalue (raising a person’s capability to earnincome). The unequal distribution of assetsmay prevent poorer households from bor-rowing to accumulate human capital, thusperpetuating poverty and inequality. Policies
that reduce inequalities of opportunity arecrucial for enabling poorer households toinvest in their human potential. As techno-
logical change increasingly affects the struc-ture of economies, worker skills must evolve.
Robust insurance mechanisms—the thirdpriority—are needed to protect the extremelypoor from destitution and the vulnerableagainst evolving risks, including climatechange. These mechanisms can help familiesavoid irreversible losses and prevent themfrom having to make decisions with costlylong-run implications. Noncontributorysocial assistance programs for the chronic orextremely poor protect them from destitution
and promote investments in their children’shuman capital. Social insurance programsprevent people from falling back into pov-erty, whether from individual illness, tempo-rary unemployment, or localized droughts.Generally, the poor in developing countriesare disproportionally affected by shocks.One reason is that the poor have lower accessto resources and savings to absorb the impactof shocks, whether they come from climatechange or political, economic, or finan-cial instability. Climate change may have a
greater impact on the poor relative to othertypes of shocks because the poor tend tobe more dependent on agriculture and havemore perilous access to water. Insurancemechanisms are needed to help countriescope with systemic shocks.
Evolving circumstances demand a newapproach—enter the SDGs
Several “megatrends” are playing a criticalrole in framing what will be feasible through
2030. These include the unprecedentedincrease in global connectedness, includingthe cross-border movements of trade, ser-vices, capital, and people; the shift of theglobal economic center of gravity toward theEast; the pace of technological change andadoption; the move toward urbanization; theevolution of demographic trends; the generalfailure of countries to secure long-term envi-ronmental sustainability; and the impact ofhuman activity on climate change. Trade,finance, communications, and migration are
FIGURE O.3 Five characteristics have been key among countriesthat sustained rapid growth
Source: GMR team adaptation from Commission on Growth and Development 2008.
Effective
leadership and governance
Future orientationto meet investment needs
Outward orientationto leverage and discipline
Market orientationto guide structural change
Macroeconomic stability
so markets work
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all expanding rapidly, bringing the worldcloser together and increasing economic inte-gration (figure O.4).
These megatrends may help or hinder
efforts to reach the development goals. On thepositive side, the shift in the global economiccenter of gravity to developing countries cre-ates opportunities. The deepening of globaltrade and investment connections could helpreverse slipping potential growth in somecountries, and technological change is alsoproving to be a driver of productivity growth.On the other hand, increased connectednesspermits the rapid spreading of economic crisesin one country to the rest of the world. Urban-ization is associated with economic growth,
but it can also give rise to urban slums andenvironmental damage. Lower fertility ratesreflect improved health and labor marketopportunities for women, yet falling sharesof the working-age population can produceheadwinds to growth and put the fiscal sus-tainability of many public services at risk.
Cognizant of these trends, the SDGs rep-resent a greater level of ambition and a moreholistic vision of sustainable development.By shifting focus to quality, the SDGs seekto address the unfinished agenda and scale
up impact. The SDGs recognize that collec-tive action is needed to address global chal-lenges such as the need for more resilientinternational financial systems, the sharing of
transboundary resources, and, most urgently,slowing and coping with climate change.Meeting the SDG investment needs requiresa shift from “billions” in official develop-ment assistance to “trillions” in investmentsto unlock, leverage, and catalyze domesticpublic resources and private capital flows.The SDGs need to be pursued in a changingworld, with new opportunities and challengesbrought by evolving global megatrends thatshape development prospects. A central chal-lenge in this respect is demographic change.
The SDGs recognize the interconnectionsbetween development objectives. There areimportant interactions between developmentgoals, and they cannot be effectively pursuedseparately from each other. For example,progress on health goals depends on invest-ments in infrastructure that provides accessto safe water and improved sanitation. Simi-larly, limiting carbon monoxide (CO2) emis-sions to slow global warming requires themodernization of energy supplies. Hence,the SDGs explicitly articulate goals that are
FIGURE O.4 Communication and trade are increasing global economic integration
Source: Kose and Ozturk 2014.Note: Trade integration reects ratio of total imports and e xports toglobal GDP. Financial integration is the ratio of total nancial in-ows andout-ows (including bank loans, direct investment, bonds, and equities)to global GD P.
Source: World Development Indicators, World Bank.
0
20
40
60
80
100
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012
Internet
Mobile phone
a. Global trade and nance are now more integrated b. Internet and mobile phone use is skyrocketing
1 9 6 5
– 7 4
1 9 7 5
– 8 4
1 9 8 5
– 9 4
1 9 9
5 – 2 0
0 4
2 0 0 5
– 1 4
S h a r e o f u s e r s i n g l o b a l p o p u l a t i o n ( % )
0
20
40
60
80
120
S h a r e o f G D P ( % )
Trade integration Financial integration
100
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“integrated and indivisible and balance thethree dimensions of sustainable development:the economic, social, and environmental”
(UN 2015). The breadth of the SDGs hasraised questions about whether the scale ofthe agenda will dilute focus, especially whensome development exigencies are likely tobe more pressing than others at the countrylevel. Still, the SDGs are not simply a menuof development objectives, and policy mak-ers and other stakeholders are called upon topursue the goals as an integrated whole.
The World Bank Group (WBG) supportsthe 2030 agenda for sustainable development.In 2013, the WBG established clear goals to
guide its own work: to end extreme povertyglobally by 2030, promote shared prosperityin every country, and to do so in ways thatsustainably secure the future of the planetand its resources, promote social inclusion,and limit the economic burdens that futuregenerations inherit. These goals, conceptu-ally and in practice, are fully aligned with theSDGs: end poverty, promote prosperity, andimprove people’s well-being while protectingthe environment. The WBG is committed topartnering closely with its client governments
and its development partners to further the2030 agenda. Building on and learning fromthe experience of the MDGs, the WBG willhelp to secure financing; help to deliver devel-opment solutions at the country, regional,and global levels; and work with partners tohelp convene, connect, and coordinate.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)actively participated in the debate on thenew global development agenda and it isstrongly committed, within the scope of itsmandate, to support the SDGs. The IMF will
help member countries achieve the SDGs byproviding advice on strengthening macro-economic policies, technical assistance onbuilding capacity, and resources to boost eco-nomic resilience against adverse shocks. NewIMF initiatives in support of member coun-tries’ development efforts include enhanc-ing support for countries building domesticcapacity in tax policy and