Can Extreme Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa be Eliminated by 2030?

Author:

Bicaba Zorobabel1,Brixiová Zuzana2,Ncube Mthuli34

Affiliation:

1. African Development Bank

2. University of Cape Town and Institute for Study of Labor (IZA)

3. University of Oxford

4. Corresponding e-maill addresses are zorobabelbicaba@gmail.com; zbrixiova@gmail.com; and M.Ncube@quantumglobalgroup.com.

Abstract

Abstract Eradicating extreme poverty for all people everywhere by 2030 is the first goal among the UN Sustainable Development Goals that guide the current development agenda. This paper examines its feasibility for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the world's poorest but growing region. It finds that under plausible assumptions extreme poverty will not be eradicated in SSA by 2030, but it can be reduced to low levels through high growth and income redistribution towards the poor segments of the society. National and regional policies should aim at structural transformation and industrialization that would make their growth paths more inclusive and ‘green’. International organizations, including informal ones such as the G20, can play a critical role in this endeavor by encouraging policy coordination and coherence. Further, African countries will need a greater scope for bringing their perspectives into global economic debates on issues impacting sustainable development on the continent.

Publisher

The Pennsylvania State University Press

Reference44 articles.

1. African Development Bank (2016), African Development Report 2015: Growth, Poverty and Inequality Nexus—Overcoming Barriers to Sustainable Development, AfDB: Abidjan.

2. African Development Bank (2014), Addressing Fragility and Building Resilience in Africa: The African Development Bank Group Strategy 2014 - 2019, AfDB: Tunis.

3. African Development Bank (2011), ‘The Middle of the Pyramid: Dynamics of the Middle Class in Africa’, AfDB Market Brief (April).

4. Alkire, S. and Santos, M. E. (2010), ‘Acute Multidimensional Poverty: A New Index for Developing Countries’, OPHI Working Paper No. 38.

5. Asongu, S. A., (2016), ‘Reinventing Foreign Aid for Inclusive and Sustainable Development: Kuznets, Piketty and the Great Policy Reversal’, Journal of Economic Surveys Vol. 30(4), 736-755.

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