By Arun
Kumar | IANS India Private Limited
From Washington (IANS) The percentage of people living
in extreme poverty declined from 52 percent in 1981 to 22 percent in 2008
thanks to strong economic growth in the emerging markets ofIndia, Brazil and China,
according to a new report.
This
means that the Millennium Development Goal of cuttingextreme poverty in
half by 2015 has already been met, US think tank Hudson Institute's Centre for
Global Prosperity's (CGP) annual Index of Global
Philanthropy and Remittances noted citing a World Bank report.
A
spill-over effect into economies in Africa and South America, investment in
emerging markets as growth stagnated in western economies and high
export commodity prices have also helped blunt the effects of the recession in
developing countries, it said.
The 2012
Index also shows:
The
single largest recipient of US remittances was Mexico, which received an
estimated $22.2 billion in 2010, a $2 billion increase from the previous year.
Following
Mexico are China, India, and the Philippines, with $12.2 billion, $12.0
billion, and $10.1 billion, respectively. While remittances to China and India
increased from 2010, remittances to the Philippines saw a slight decline.
However,
while remittances overall have increased, because the currencies of several
large remittance recipient countries, including Mexico, India and the
Philippines, have appreciated relative to the US dollar at the same time that
inflation is increasing, migrants have to send more money home to maintain
recipients' purchasing power.
In 2010,
the most recent year for which data are available, philanthropy and remittances
from the developed to the developing world were nearly twice as much as
government aid
($246 vs. $128 billion).
While
total government aid grew to one of its highest levels of $128 billion, it
accounts for only 18 percent of total financial flows and continues to be a
minority shareholder in international assistance efforts.
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