- The state of being poor; lack of the means of providing material needs or comforts.
- Deficiency in amount; scantiness: "the poverty of feeling that reduced her soul" (Scott Turow).
- Unproductiveness; infertility: the poverty of the soil.
- Renunciation made by a member of a religious order of the right to own proper
In Luxembourg, one is relative poor if they make less than half of the GDP per capita ($78,395 / 2 = <$39,197.50) ($PPP, from IMF 2009). Clearly, this is a much higher number than a country like Tunisia ($8,254 / 2 = <$4,128) ($PPP, from IMF 2009). However, we can compare across countries absolute poverty because we can simply calculate the percentage of the population living below $1 PPP per day. The following map from Wikipedia shows us these figures graphically. Unsurprisingly, the map shows a similar pattern to countries with the most un/underdevelopment and corruption.
Videos one, two and three all provide visualizations and stories of poverty. Watch them. The entire blog is also informative.
A poverty trap occurs when countries cannot lift themselves out of poverty because of the twisted nature of barriers to growth and development. We can illustrate this using a poverty cycle like the one shown in Blink & Dorton (2007):
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