Business Insider : Sep 16, 2020, 03:33 PM
New York: For decades, people around the world have been getting richer and healthier.The number of humans subsisting on less than $1.90 a day has slowly, but surely, been inching downward year after year. Until now.2020, and the pandemic that came with it, have dealt people everywhere a major blow — both to their wallets, and to their collective health. The pandemic is driving the wedge between rich and poor deeper in nearly every country in a way that hasn't been seen in decades."This year is different — it's unique," Bill Gates said on a conference call with reporters ahead of the release of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's Goalkeepers 2020 report. "The COVID-19 pandemic has not only stopped progress — it's pushed it backwards."The change is unprecedented in the history of the 20-year-old, $50 billion foundation. The foundation's Goalkeepers report, established in 2017, is meant to serve as an annual look at progress around the world on benchmarks of poverty, health and well-being, sanitation, education, and other sustainable development goals."Every single one of the goals was moving in the right direction," Gates said on the call, which replaced what's normally a star-studded in-person event. "The pandemic has, in almost every dimension, made inequity worse."This year, there is almost no progress to share (apart from some improvements in smoking cessation rates worldwide)."We have to confront the current reality with candor," the report said. "We've regressed." The last time this many countries were in recession at the same time was 1870The World Bank has estimated that, for the first time since 1998, poverty rates are set to go up dramatically worldwide, "as the global economy falls into recession."Here's how much worse the International Monetary Fund projects the downturn in gross domestic product from the coronavirus pandemic will be, as compared with the 2008 recession:In terms of GDP loss, "this is the worst recession since the end of World War II," the report said, suggesting the GDP drop is twice as great as that of the 2008 recession.The last time this many countries were in recession at once was in 1870, literally two lifetimes ago," the report also said.The number of people living on less than $1.90 a day, the international benchmark for extreme poverty, is climbing in lockstep with the virus' spread.Global poverty is increasing for the first time in 20 years"We have 37 more million people in extreme poverty," Gates said. "That's after 20 years where that number's gone down."The downturn isn't limited to poor countries. In rich countries like the US, income gains had already been uneven in recent years, with the richest getting richer a lot faster than everybody else.Now, that divide is growing sharply worse.According to the US Census Bureau, roughly one in three Americans had trouble paying their bills in August because of the pandemic, an issue that's disproportionately affecting Black and Latino Americans.25 years of progress on vaccines was just erased in 25 weeksThe pandemic has also meant many more kids have been going without doses of life-saving vaccines.According to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (the Gates Foundation's data partner), 25 years of progress to get the world vaccinated against deadly diseases was just swiftly wiped out in 25 weeks. Here's one example of how vaccine coverage has dropped to levels that haven't been seen since the 1990s, showing diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, or DTP, vaccination coverage worldwide:Tetanus, which people sometimes get from stepping on nails, is one infection that herd immunity won't curb because you can contract it easily from coming in contact with infected soil, dust, or manure.That's one reason it's critical that everyone has access to basic preventive shots like DTP, which halt millions of deaths every year.