Which country has more than half of its population lives in poverty?
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Which country has more than half of its population lives in poverty?
The number of people in extreme poverty has fallen from nearly 1.9 billion in 1990 to about 650 million in 2018. This was possible as economic growth reached more and more parts of the world. In Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Ghana, and China more than half the population lived in extreme poverty a generation ago.
What country do you think has the worst record for helping its poor?
What country do you think has the worst record for helping its poor? – Quora. This has got to be Equatorial Guinea, it’s both one of the richest and poorest countries in the world, and the single most unequal.
Who are the world’s poorest poor?
South Sudan is the poorest country in the world with a poverty rate of 82.3\% in 2021 (Poverty Rate By Country 2021, 2021).
Can you get citizenship if you’ve never lived in another country?
It depends on the country of your birth, and how you were born there. I have citizenship in a country I wasn’t even born in and have never lived in, because it can be passed down from my parents. Other countries don’t allow this. Probably the best resource for a basic introduction is wikipedia.
Can you have jus soli citizenship if born in another country?
It also depends on whether the country you were born in recognises jus soli and in what circumstances. In the GCC states you can be born and live there your whole life and still not be allowed to get citizenship (or even permanent residence).
Which countries do not give citizenship to everyone born on soil?
Depends on whether your country of birth confers citizenship based on jus soli (i.e. to everyone that has been born on its soil). Germany, Italy and Greece don’t. Every country has its own citizenship laws: hence this question cannot be answered without knowing the exact country of birth.
Where do you associate with your identity when you move?
The country you moved to: In my experience, those who move to ‘immigrant nations’ such as the US, Canada and Australia are more likely to associate and identity with their adoptive homeland. This is in contrast to those who grew up in multicultural but NOT cosmopolitan societies (eg.