| 
       Poverty Drops 
      Below 1 Billion, says World Bank 
      WASHINGTON, April 15, 2007 Global poverty rates 
      continued to fall in the first four years of the 21st century 
      according to new estimates published in the World Development 
      Indicators 2007, released today. The proportion of people 
      living on less than $1 a day fell to 18.4 percent in 2004, leaving an 
      estimated 985 million people living in extreme poverty. By comparison, the 
      total number of extreme poor was 1.25 billion in 1990. Two-dollar-a-day 
      poverty rates are falling too, but an estimated 2.6 billion people, almost 
      half the population of the developing world, were still living below that 
      level in 2004.  
      Developing countries have averaged a solid 3.9 percent annual growth in 
      GDP per capita a year since 2000, which contributed to rapidly falling 
      poverty rates in all developing regions over the past few years. Another 
      key reason dollar-a-day poverty fell by over 260 million between 1990 and 
      2004 was China's massive poverty reduction over that period. Indeed, East 
      Asia's extreme poverty rate dropped to 9 percent in 2004.  
      
       
        
        
          | 
            
             World Development Indicators 2007: 
              |   
      
      
      
      . |