- published: 06 Apr 2010
- views: 3494
- author: Edward Bahaw
1:04
Absolute and Relative Poverty
Absolute and Relative Poverty featuring Spongebob Squarepants and Patrick Star....
published: 06 Apr 2010
author: Edward Bahaw
Absolute and Relative Poverty
Absolute and Relative Poverty
Absolute and Relative Poverty featuring Spongebob Squarepants and Patrick Star.- published: 06 Apr 2010
- views: 3494
- author: Edward Bahaw
4:10
Living in poverty - The UK and Europe
This is a short video from the ONS looking at people living in relative poverty within the...
published: 07 Jun 2012
author: Office For National Statistics
Living in poverty - The UK and Europe
Living in poverty - The UK and Europe
This is a short video from the ONS looking at people living in relative poverty within the UK and Europe. It shows how it has changed from 2005 and the impac...- published: 07 Jun 2012
- views: 1815
- author: Office For National Statistics
7:10
ABSOLUTE VS RELATIVE POVERTY
...
published: 13 Nov 2012
author: SOCINSKISMASH
ABSOLUTE VS RELATIVE POVERTY
3:58
International poverty: absolute and relative
This is a video created by one of my students. It shows the different experiences of pover...
published: 02 Jul 2008
author: MrPBirch
International poverty: absolute and relative
International poverty: absolute and relative
This is a video created by one of my students. It shows the different experiences of poverty around the world and asks some poignant and searching questions.- published: 02 Jul 2008
- views: 5010
- author: MrPBirch
0:23
Part two, Relative Poverty
Part two, Relative Poverty - created at http://animoto.com....
published: 14 Mar 2013
author: Kayleigh Cordon
Part two, Relative Poverty
Part two, Relative Poverty
Part two, Relative Poverty - created at http://animoto.com.- published: 14 Mar 2013
- views: 36
- author: Kayleigh Cordon
7:43
POVERTY
Poverty is the lack of basic human needs, such as clean and fresh water, nutrition, health...
published: 14 Mar 2011
author: baldotorrijos
POVERTY
POVERTY
Poverty is the lack of basic human needs, such as clean and fresh water, nutrition, health care, education, clothing and shelter, because of the inability to...- published: 14 Mar 2011
- views: 568
- author: baldotorrijos
5:46
From Tony Mandarich Football 2 Nick Diaz mma relative poverty?lol
Without Stevia, Mongo would be a fat pig. When you snort stevia, smoke stevia and drink st...
published: 08 Jun 2011
author: jesustouchedme69
From Tony Mandarich Football 2 Nick Diaz mma relative poverty?lol
From Tony Mandarich Football 2 Nick Diaz mma relative poverty?lol
Without Stevia, Mongo would be a fat pig. When you snort stevia, smoke stevia and drink stevia sweet water all day long, you will shit weight. Oh no shit, yo...- published: 08 Jun 2011
- views: 154
- author: jesustouchedme69
5:14
Poverty Profile Report- 112.5m Nigerians Live in Relative Poor Conditions
According to the Poverty Profile Report released by the National Bureau of Statistics for ...
published: 20 Feb 2012
author: SilverbirdNews
Poverty Profile Report- 112.5m Nigerians Live in Relative Poor Conditions
Poverty Profile Report- 112.5m Nigerians Live in Relative Poor Conditions
According to the Poverty Profile Report released by the National Bureau of Statistics for 2010, 112.5 million Nigerians live in relative poverty conditions. ...- published: 20 Feb 2012
- views: 1077
- author: SilverbirdNews
8:22
Poverty is Relative
We feel poor when we have less than those around us, even though we might have lots of "th...
published: 22 May 2013
author: Ron Dalgliesh
Poverty is Relative
Poverty is Relative
We feel poor when we have less than those around us, even though we might have lots of "things".- published: 22 May 2013
- views: 19
- author: Ron Dalgliesh
3:03
Inequalities, Poverty and Hunger,
People all over the world have different experiences of life!! Absolute and Relative pover...
published: 24 Dec 2009
author: TommysVideoz
Inequalities, Poverty and Hunger,
Inequalities, Poverty and Hunger,
People all over the world have different experiences of life!! Absolute and Relative poverty.- published: 24 Dec 2009
- views: 503
- author: TommysVideoz
3:27
Poverty line set for HK (28.9.2013)
Chief Executive CY Leung chaired the first Commission on Poverty Summit today, at which Ch...
published: 30 Sep 2013
Poverty line set for HK (28.9.2013)
Poverty line set for HK (28.9.2013)
Chief Executive CY Leung chaired the first Commission on Poverty Summit today, at which Chief Secretary and commission Chairman Carrie Lam announced the poverty line for 2012 to be 50% of median monthly household income before tax and welfare transfers. The 2012 poverty line for one-person households is set at $3,600, and at $7,700, $11,500, $14,300, $14,800 for two, three, four and five-person households, and $15,800 for households with six or more people. Mrs Lam pointed out the poverty line has limitations as an analysis tool. "For example, assets are not taken into account and this may overstate the number of people living in poverty. Hence, a poverty line should not be taken as the poverty-alleviation line," she said, adding that relative poverty will mean a poorer population always exists statistically. Among the 400,000 households below the poverty line after taking recurrent cash benefits into account, 102,700 households were living on Comprehensive Social Security Assistance. The remaining 300,300 were non-CSSA households, of which 11,300 households were unemployed, 143,500 households were working households and 145,500 households were economically inactive households. Before policy intervention, there were 541,000 poor households, involving 1,312,000 people, and the poverty rate was 19.6%. Mrs Lam said policy intervention can bring down the number of households in poverty to 403,000, involving 1,018,000 people, resulting in a poverty rate of 15.2%. For all 1.02 million people to be lifted up to the poverty line, $14.8 billion would be needed, she said. This represents an average of $3,100 spent per household. Mrs Lam said Comprehensive Social Security Assistance has the most notable impact on poverty alleviation among recurrent cash policies, lifting 90,000 households out of poverty. Among the 100,000 CSSA households who were still living under the poverty line after policy intervention, almost 80% were public housing tenants and 10% were living in self-financed private housing or Home Ownership Scheme flats. It is believed they do not face significant problems with housing needs. Mrs Lam said the 140,000 non-CSSA working households should be given priority, as this group of households has a greater number of people, more than 80% of which are households of three people or more. That means a dependency ratio of 1:2, or one person supporting three dependents, with 30% being children and students, she said. Mrs Lam said employment is the best way to tackle poverty. Actions proposed included work incentives, focusing public resources on the working poor, and supporting youth in CSSA families in their studies. Apart from members of the commission and its six task forces, representatives of political, business and academic sectors, think tanks, non-governmental organisations, service groups, and principal officials took part in today's summit. ( http://j.mp/1bilH71 )- published: 30 Sep 2013
- views: 1
Vimeo results:
4:14
The Bank
In Spain, around 20% of the population live below the rate of relative poverty. The Spanis...
published: 13 Dec 2010
author: Kauri Multimedia
The Bank
In Spain, around 20% of the population live below the rate of relative poverty. The Spanish Food Bank Foundation assists those hardest hit by collecting excess food and distributing to agencies and community action groups. The photofilm shows the work carried out by the Aragón Food Bank and introduces viewers to the volunteers working there, mostly early-retired and retired old people. Pivotal in the running of the Foundation, they are examples of altruism, hard work and goodwill in times of increasing hardship in a competitive and excluding society such as todays.
4:37
Baby Watoto
There are many vulnerable babies in Uganda who are abandoned or orphaned due to poverty, l...
published: 02 Feb 2011
author: Watoto
Baby Watoto
There are many vulnerable babies in Uganda who are abandoned or orphaned due to poverty, lack of education and the HIV/AIDS crisis. Almost all of them fail to make it to their 5th birthday because of the much-needed intense care and medical attention that their immediate relatives cannot provide.
7:50
How do we turn Brain Drain to Brain Gain? - Philip Emeagwali
How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain?
Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered ...
published: 25 Jan 2008
author: Philip Emeagwali
How do we turn Brain Drain to Brain Gain? - Philip Emeagwali
How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain?
Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered on October 24, 2003, at the Pan-African Conference on Brain Drain, Elsah, Illinois USA. The entire transcript, letters and photos are posted at http://emeagwali.com/speeches/brain-drain/to-brain-gain/reverse-brain-drain-from-africa.html. Permission to reproduce is granted.
Thank you for the pleasant introduction as well as for inviting me to share my thoughts on turning “brain drain” into “brain gain.”
For 10 million African-born emigrants, the word “home” is synonymous with the United States, Britain or other country outside of Africa.
Personally, I have lived continuously in the United States for the past 30 years. My last visit to Africa was 17 years ago.
On the day I left Nigeria, I felt sad because I was leaving my family behind. I believed I would return eight years later, probably marry an Igbo girl, and then spend the rest of my life in Nigeria.
But 25 years ago, I fell in love with an American girl, married her three years later, and became eligible to sponsor a Green Card visa for my 35 closest relatives, including my parents and all my siblings, nieces and nephews.
The story of how I brought 35 people to the United States exemplifies how 10 million skilled people have emigrated out of Africa during the past 30 years.
We came to the United States on student visas and then changed our status to become permanent residents and then naturalized citizens. Our new citizenship status helped us sponsor relatives, and also inspired our friends to immigrate here.
Ten million Africans now constitute an invisible nation that resides outside Africa. Although invisible, it is a nation as populous as Angola, Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe. If it were to be a nation with distinct borders, it would have an income roughly equivalent to Africa’s gross domestic product.
Although the African Union does not recognize the African Diaspora as a nation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) acknowledges its economic importance. The IMF estimates the African Diaspora now constitutes the biggest group of foreign investors in Africa.
Take for example Western Union. It estimates that it is not atypical for an immigrant to wire 00 per month to relatives in Africa. If you assume that most Africans living outside Africa send money each month and you do the math, you will agree with the IMF that the African Diaspora is indeed the largest foreign investor in Africa.
What few realize is that Africans who immigrate to the United States contribute 40 times more wealth to the American than to the African economy. According to the United Nations, an African professional working in the United States contributes about 50,000 per year to the U.S. economy.
Again, if you do the math, you will realize that the African professional remitting 00 per month to Africa is contributing 40 times more to the United States economy than to the African one.
On a relative scale, that means for every 00 per month a professional African sends home, that person contributes 2,000 per month to the U.S. economy.
Of course, the issue more important than facts and figures is eliminating poverty in Africa, not merely reducing it by sending money to relatives. Money alone cannot eliminate poverty in Africa, because even one million dollars is a number with no intrinsic value.
Real wealth cannot be measured by money, yet we often confuse money with wealth. Under the status quo, Africa would still remain poor even if we were to send all the money in the world there.
Ask someone who is ill what “wealth” means, and you will get a very different answer than from most other people.
If you were HIV-positive, you would gladly exchange one million dollars to become HIV-negative.
When you give your money to your doctor, that physician helps you convert your money into health - or rather, wealth.
Money cannot teach your children. Teachers can. Money cannot bring electricity to your home. Engineers can. Money cannot cure sick people. Doctors can.
Because it is only a nation’s human capital that can be converted into real wealth, that human capital is much more valuable than its financial capital.
A few years ago, Zambia had 1,600 medical doctors. Today, Zambia has only 400 medical doctors. Kenya retains only 10% of the nurses and doctors trained there. A similar story is told from South Africa to Ghana.
I also speak from my family experiences. After contributing 25 years to Nigerian society as a nurse, my father retired on a 5-per-month pension.
By comparison, my four sisters each earn 5 per hour as nurses in the United States. If my father had had the opportunity my sisters did, he certainly would have immigrated to the United States as a young nurse.
The “brain drain” explains, in part, why affluent Africans fly to London for their medical treatments.
Furthermore, because a significant percentage of African doctors and
0:15
iWin
iWin is a project that did not win anything whatsoever, sadly.
The piece was our submissi...
published: 09 Sep 2009
author: Quba Michalski
iWin
iWin is a project that did not win anything whatsoever, sadly.
The piece was our submission to Photoshop "See what's possible" competition organized by Adobe and Cut&Paste.; It tells a story of Çiğdem winning the competition with her amazing design and animation skills.
Our aim was to jam as much story and imagery as possible into a relatively short 15-second time limit imposed by the competition rules. We decided to avoid cuts between scenes, and instead used fast-paced transitions showcasing the power of Photoshop / After Effects animation.
The style used in this work originates from the narrative itself. The main character starts the story in poverty, with no means to create high-end designs. She creates collages by mix-and-matching found images - the same technique through which the actual story is being told. Both the textures and color choices are crude and unrefined, further emphasizing a hand-made quality of the designs. It all feeds into the main theme of the competition - even with minimal means, Adobe software makes anything possible.
Youtube results:
59:14
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World (slide-audio)
Speaker(s): Martin Ravallion Chair: Professor Craig Calhoun Recorded on 22 November 2012 i...
published: 07 Jan 2013
author: lsewebsite
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World (slide-audio)
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World (slide-audio)
Speaker(s): Martin Ravallion Chair: Professor Craig Calhoun Recorded on 22 November 2012 in Old Theatre, Old Building. Relative deprivation, shame and social...- published: 07 Jan 2013
- views: 490
- author: lsewebsite
3:51
Defining and measuring energy-access and energy poverty
First ICCG lecture on Energy Poverty, given by Shonali Pachauri, IIASA, Austria In this le...
published: 04 Mar 2013
author: ICCGOV
Defining and measuring energy-access and energy poverty
Defining and measuring energy-access and energy poverty
First ICCG lecture on Energy Poverty, given by Shonali Pachauri, IIASA, Austria In this lecture, Shonali Pachauri addresses the concepts of absolute and rela...- published: 04 Mar 2013
- views: 836
- author: ICCGOV
10:11
60 million Americans are poor and hungry
The most common measure of poverty in the United States is the "poverty threshold" set by ...
published: 23 Jul 2009
author: ProtectSouthOssetia
60 million Americans are poor and hungry
60 million Americans are poor and hungry
The most common measure of poverty in the United States is the "poverty threshold" set by the U.S. government. This measure recognizes poverty as a lack of t...- published: 23 Jul 2009
- views: 10979
- author: ProtectSouthOssetia
59:03
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World
Slide-audio available here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvg1VOVyrVs Speaker(s): Martin...
published: 07 Jan 2013
author: lsewebsite
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World
More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World
Slide-audio available here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvg1VOVyrVs Speaker(s): Martin Ravallion Chair: Professor Craig Calhoun Recorded on 22 November 2...- published: 07 Jan 2013
- views: 487
- author: lsewebsite