时间:2019-01-13 作者:英语课 分类:VOA标准英语2012年(八月)


英语课

 



Where Do the World’s Poor Live?


Most of the world’s poor do not live in poor countries. New research says nearly 80 percent are actually in middle income countries. Two billion poor people – those who live on two dollars a day or less – live in middle income countries. That compares to 500 million in low income countries.


The study was led by Andy Sumner, research fellow at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex.


“Many countries over the last decade, in particular, have gotten much better off in average income. But poverty hasn’t fallen as much as one might expect or hope. All of this speaks to a lot of the current debates about the rising importance of inequality around the world and whether debates around the U.N. poverty goals that are due for renewal 1 of some kind in 2015 – whether issues about inequality – ought to have much higher focus,” he said.


One of the Millennium 2 Development Goals calls for eradicating 3 extreme poverty and hunger by 2015. The U.N. has said the global economic crisis of recent years has slowed progress. Since the crisis, it said, “more workers find themselves and their families living in extreme poverty.”


Sumner said even if a country has economic growth of five to six percent it can have little effect on those earning only a dollar or two a day.


“The poor may well be living in remote areas or low income areas well away from the capital or large cities. They may also be in social groups that are discriminated 4 against or there may be internal regulations or substantial costs of migrating across the country,” he said.


Sumner said half of the world’s poor live in India and China; one quarter live in heavily populated middle income countries, such as Nigeria, Pakistan and Indonesia. The rest are in low income countries.


“If you look over the last 20 years, although at a global level the proportion of the world’s population in poverty has fallen a lot, it’s actually about the same in absolute numbers, partly because of population growth,” he said.


But where will the world’s poor live in 2020 or 2030? Sumner said that half of the world’s poor could still be in middle income countries. He warns that figure could rise if the gap between the haves and have-nots continues to widen.


He estimated the cost of eliminating extreme poverty to be about 60 to 80 billion dollars a year. That’s about 0.3 percent of the world’s GDP, or gross domestic product, which is the value of final goods and services produced in countries.


Sumner said that with the “distribution of global poverty away from the poorest countries to middle income countries, a new approach to understanding and tackling extreme poverty is required.” He added that this includes a more equitable 5 distribution of the “benefits of economic growth and public spending…on the chronic 6, long-term poor wherever they live.”




adj.(契约)延期,续订,更新,复活,重来
  • Her contract is coming up for renewal in the autumn.她的合同秋天就应该续签了。
  • Easter eggs symbolize the renewal of life.复活蛋象征新生。
n.一千年,千禧年;太平盛世
  • The whole world was counting down to the new millennium.全世界都在倒计时迎接新千年的到来。
  • We waited as the clock ticked away the last few seconds of the old millennium.我们静候着时钟滴答走过千年的最后几秒钟。
摧毁,完全根除( eradicate的现在分词 )
  • Objective: To study the acute and chronic toxicity of Ten-flavor-acne eradicating-capsule. 目的:探讨复方中药合剂十味平痤胶囊的急性及慢性毒性。
  • We are on the verge of eradicating polio in the world. 我们已在世界消除小儿?痹症的边缘了。
分别,辨别,区分( discriminate的过去式和过去分词 ); 歧视,有差别地对待
  • His great size discriminated him from his followers. 他的宽广身材使他不同于他的部下。
  • Should be a person that has second liver virus discriminated against? 一个患有乙肝病毒的人是不是就应该被人歧视?
adj.公平的;公正的
  • This is an equitable solution to the dispute. 这是对该项争议的公正解决。
  • Paying a person what he has earned is equitable. 酬其应得,乃公平之事。
adj.(疾病)长期未愈的,慢性的;极坏的
  • Famine differs from chronic malnutrition.饥荒不同于慢性营养不良。
  • Chronic poisoning may lead to death from inanition.慢性中毒也可能由虚弱导致死亡。
学英语单词
acetic acid fermentation
allen sentence completion test
almadens
approximable in polynomial time
automatic shot blasting rotating table
backup governor
Bengalis
boondockers
burakumins
carbon dioxide analyser
code hoisting
common principles of international law
compactibility curve
condition of reduction
cross assemblers
derived measurement
diffractive dissociation
diminishing strake
dioxadrol
Dipterocarpus retusus
disoblige
displaced fractures
drive descending theory
Durbin-Watson statistic
economic lifeline of the country
education action zone
emitted electron energy
endometrial polyp
Fasnia
five-pieces
frame photometry
gayley
genus Trichostigma
golestan
gravimagnetization
grindability factor
guaranteed loan
himantocladium plumula
hurry away
hydrogencarbonate
imbrewed
indoeuropean
Kiszombor
LCSP
liquid cooling system
Logarithmic receiver.
loss of underground water
lunar trajectories
Manchioneal
Mirfac
Moskvy, Kanal imeni
mounting lock washer
Mpouya
multioperator welding transformator
MXA
necrophil
o-phenylphenol
off punishment
old fellow
on points
open-cup tester
pallet ship
paper cup
Patam
pdo
phenergans
philtrum ridge
Pottsia pubescens
protoquamquam
public works
rachicerus brevicornis
raphide raphides)
Republic of Kenya
ripple drift bedding
Rodrigues matrix
rufous-bellied kookaburra
sagoin
Salvada
sand shoal
sarel
selective polymerization
Serravalle Scrivia
skinflick
skronking
snobbishnesses
starclave
swive
tail-spin
talk tall
tape recordings
thermodynamic laws
twoseater
ultra-soft x-ray
under-count
valve-rod
vikery
Vinica
Where the rubber meets the road
WLI
wood shrinkage
wound core
zein