Elekere ụwa ịda ogbenye

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Elekere ụwa ịda ogbenye

Elekere ụwa ịda ogbenye [1] bụ ngwa iji nyochaa ọganihu megide ịda ogbenye n'ụwa niile, [2] na mpaghara. [3] Ọ na-enye data ịda ogbenye ozugbo n'ofe mba niile. [4] [5] Ndị NGO dabeere na Vienna, World Data Lab mebere ya, ewepụtara ya na Berlin na ogbako ọha na 2017, [6] [7] ma kwadoro ya site na Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development . [1]

Elekere ahụ na-achọ ileba anya na ọdịiche dị na data mmepe gburugburu ihe nrịbama ọganihu ọha na eze, malite na ọnụ ọgụgụ ịda ogbenye, ma na-agbalị ime ka ha kwekọọ na ihe ngosi akụ na ụba na nke igwe mmadụ dị ka Gross Domestic Product (GDP), na clocks [8] na amụma n'otu n'otu, nke ugbua. nwere ezigbo oge na atụmatụ na-atụ anya.

Usoro[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Elekere ụwa ịda ogbenye na-eji data dị n'ihu ọha na nkesa ego, stratification, mmepụta na oriri, nke ndị otu mba dị iche iche na ọtụtụ mba dị iche iche nyere, ọkachasị UN, WorldBank, na International Monetary Fund . Otu ndị a na-achịkọta data gọọmentị na obodo ọ bụla nyere ha. N'okwu ole na ole, gọọmentị anaghị enye data. The World Poverty Clock na-eji ihe atụ iji tụọ ịda ogbenye na mba ndị a, na-ekpuchi 99.7% nke ndị bi n'ụwa. Ọ na-egosipụtakwa ka ego onye ọ bụla nwere ike isi gbanwee ka oge na-aga, na-eji amụma uto IMF maka oge ọkara nke agbakwunyere ogologo oge " ụzọ mmekọrịta ọha na eze na akụ na ụba " nke Institute of International Applied Systems Analysis dị nso Vienna, Austria, na nyocha yiri ya mepụtara. site na OECD .

Edensibia[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

mmepe gburugburu ihe nrịbama ọganihu ọha na eze, malite na ọnụ ọgụgụ ịda ogbenye, ma na-agbalị ime ka ha kwekọọ na ihe ngosi akụ na ụba na nke igwe mmadụ dị ka Gross Domestic

  1. 1.0 1.1 World Poverty Clock. Retrieved on September 1, 2017.
  2. Kharas (May 2017). "Making Everyone Count: A Clock to Track Poverty in Realtime". Brookings Institution Global Economy and Development Papers. 
  3. "Africa and the World Poverty Clock", Brookings Institution Working Papers. Retrieved on 31 August 2017.
  4. ndemo. "New groundbreaking ways of measuring economic progress", The Nation (Kenya), August 14, 2017. Retrieved on August 31, 2017.
  5. Weller. An economist says 66 countries could end poverty by giving their citizens free money. Business Insider. Retrieved on 30 March 2021.
  6. Brookings (2017). Making Everyone Count: A Clock to Track Poverty in Realtime. Available at: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2017/05/10/making-everyone-count-a-clock-to-track-world-poverty-in-real-time/
  7. World Poverty Clock: Pointers for India. Free Press Journal. Retrieved on September 1, 2017.
  8. U.S. Census Bureau. Population Clock Available at: https://www.census.gov/popclock/