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Oxfam urges rescue to stop 'half a billion more' in poverty

Oxfam cited research by the King's College London and Australian National University estimating that as many as half a billion people could be forced into poverty, or 8 percent of the world's population 

  (Agence France-Presse)
Paris, France
Thu, April 9, 2020

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Oxfam urges rescue to stop 'half a billion more' in poverty Officials distributes food packages from the Ministry of Social Affairs to residents in Tebet settlement, Jakarta, on Wednesday. International aid group Oxfam on Thursday urged world leaders to agree a comprehensive rescue package to muster some US$2.5 trillion needed to prevent half a billion more people being pushed into poverty by the coronavirus pandemic.  (JP/Dhoni Setiawan)

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nternational aid group Oxfam on Thursday urged world leaders to agree a comprehensive rescue package to muster some US$2.5 trillion needed to prevent half a billion more people being pushed into poverty by the coronavirus pandemic. 

It warned that the economic fallout of the coronavirus risked setting back the fight against poverty by a decade, and as much as 30 years in some regions including Africa and the Middle East.

Oxfam cited research by the King's College London and Australian National University estimating that as many as half a billion people could be forced into poverty, or 8 percent of the world's population.

"An 'Emergency Rescue Package for All' would enable poor countries to provide cash grants to those who have lost their income and to bail out vulnerable small businesses," Oxfam said.

Read also: Jakarta’s poor at risk as city drags feet on COVID-19 social assistance

Among the measures that should be undertaken include the immediate cancellation of $1 trillion worth of developing country debt payments in 2020 and the creation of at least US$1 trillion in new international reserves.

"G20 Finance Ministers, the IMF and World Bank must give developing countries an immediate cash injection to help them bail out poor and vulnerable communities," said Jose Maria Vera, Oxfam International Interim Executive Director.

Oxfam warned that while many wealthy nations have introduced multi-billion-dollar economic stimulus packages to support business and workers "most developing nations lack the financial firepower to follow suit."

Delivering the $2.5 trillion the UN estimates is needed to support developing countries through the pandemic would also require an additional $500 billion in overseas aid, Oxfam said. 

Read also: Coronavirus pandemic 'amplifying' poverty in UK

Meanwhile, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) president Suma Chakrabarti has called on the international community to join forces to combat the coronavirus pandemic, describing the demand for emergency financing as "huge".

He warned that the current crisis is the "greatest disruption to global economic activity since the Second World War".

The EBRD has already announced a 1.0 billion euro solidarity package and Chakrabarti said the developmental lender was now working on a second phase of its program.

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