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  1. 2022 Vietnam Poverty and Equity Assessment Report. The poverty and equity agenda is no longer only about raising minimum living standards and tackling chronic poverty; it is also about creating new and sustainable economic pathways for a more aspirational population. Report download.

  2. 28 avr. 2022 · A new World Bank Poverty and Equity report, From the Last Mile to the Next Mile, assesses Vietnam’s progress in poverty reduction over the decade to 2020 and examines what is needed to sustain the upward economic mobility and economic security of the millions who have left poverty.

  3. The pro-poor households in urban areas are households with average income from VND 501,000 to VND 650,000 per capita per month (roughly US$24–31 per capita per month). With the new poverty line, Vietnam's percentage of households was estimated to be 12 percent at the end of 2011.

  4. Vietnam’s remarkable journey from low to middle-income status lifted 40 million people out of poverty between 1993 and 2014. In that time span, the poverty rate dropped to 14 percent from almost 60 percent. Per capita growth since 1990 has been second only to China’s, averaging 5.6 percent a year as of 2017. Vietnamese are now better ...

  5. 5 avr. 2018 · According to Climbing the Ladder: Poverty Reduction and Shared Prosperity in Vietnam, released today by the World Bank, improving income from highland agriculture can help Vietnam further reduce poverty, which has fallen by almost 4 percentage points since 2014, to 9.8 percent in 2016.

  6. 9 mars 2015 · The World Bank’s twin goals focus on eliminating extreme poverty and boosting the income of the poorest 40% of the population (defined nationally). The map shows that large fractions of the population in rural Vietnam fall in the bottom 40%. In most cities, particularly the larger metropolises of Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Danang ...

  7. 14 avr. 2015 · In Vietnam, there are two main approaches to measuring poverty. The first approach is used by the Ministry of Labor, Invalids, and Social Affairs (MOLISA) to generate a classification used for determining those who are eligible for the national anti-poverty program as well as monitoring poverty over the short term.