International Day for the Eradication of Poverty
Poverty is not just scarcity. It is exclusion, stigma, and invisibility. Poverty is not a personal failure. It is a systemic failure. A denial of dignity and human rights.
Families in poverty often endure intrusive surveillance, burdensome eligibility checks and systems that judge, not support.
Single mothers, Indigenous households, marginalized groups face increased scrutiny, suspicion and separation.
Over 690 million people live in extreme poverty.
Nearly half the world lives on less than USD$6.85 per day.
Around 1.1 billion people suffer multidimensional poverty.
Two-thirds of people in extreme poverty are in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Progress has slowed and the path to 2030 is fragile.
Social and institutional maltreatment is structural.
It lives in rules, routines and default practices.
When people avoid help because of fear, the system has already failed them.
This year’s “International Day for the Eradication of Poverty” calls for three fundamental shifts:
From control to care:
- Designing systems based on trust, not suspicion.
- Reducing punitive conditions and simplify documentation.
From surveillance to support
- Prioritizing family-strengthening: income support, childcare, housing, mental health and justice
From top-down to co-created solutions
- Including families in design, budgeting, delivery and evaluation.
Supporting families strengthens many goals:
- Poverty Reduction
- Health & Wellbeing
- Quality Education
- Gender Equality
- Decent Work and Social Protection
- Reduced Inequalities
- Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
“Too often, people living in poverty are blamed, stigmatized, and pushed into the shadows.” - UN Secretary General, António Guterres.
2030 is looming. We must act now.
© Inter Press Service (20251015114831) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service
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