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POOR COUNTRIES OR POOR PEOPLE? DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE AND THE NEW GEOGRAPHY OF GLOBAL POVERTY
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
Population PovertyEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsGlobal PovertyDevelopment GeographyPoverty ReductionEconomic GrowthSocial SciencesPovertyPoverty AlleviationInternational RedistributionEconomic InequalityAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyEconomicsDevelopment AidPoor LiveGlobalizationEquitable DevelopmentPoverty MeasurementPopulation InequalityBusinessLow Income Developing CountryDeveloping EconomiesAbstract TwoDevelopment Policy
In recent decades, the majority of the world's poor have migrated from low‑income to middle‑income countries, driven by rapid growth in populous economies. The paper argues that development assistance should continue to target middle‑income countries despite their higher per‑capita income. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Abstract Two decades ago, most of the world's poor lived in countries officially classified as low income. Now, most of the world's poor live in middle‐income countries. The shift has been brought about by fast growth in a number of countries with large populations. This ‘new geography of global poverty’—with the mass of the poor not living in the world's poorest countries—raises questions for the current model of development assistance, where national per capita income is a key determinant of the volume and composition of aid flows. This paper reprises the changes in global poverty and discusses the case for continued development assistance to middle‐income countries. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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