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#povertyreduction — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #povertyreduction, aggregated by home.social.

  1. School Kits, Big Impact: Inside El Salvador’s Quiet Education Push

    Not just items—this is access, dignity, and a fair chance.

    Dear Cherubs, there’s something oddly powerful about a cardboard box that doesn’t contain chaos, delivery delays, or “please assemble yourself” furniture instructions. In El Salvador, it contains something far rarer: opportunity, neatly folded and mildly creased.

    Across the country, thousands of children have been receiving full school kits—uniforms, shoes, books, stationery, backpacks, and in some cases digital devices—aimed at reducing the everyday friction that keeps education just out of reach. According to UNICEF, such school supply initiatives are widely used in developing education systems to improve attendance and reduce dropout rates, especially among lower-income families.

    THE BOX THAT CHANGED THE MORNING ROUTINE

    On paper, it sounds simple: give kids the tools they need for school. In practice, it’s a quiet reshaping of daily life. No scrambling for notebooks. No “borrow a pen again?” conversations. Just a child getting ready for school without the background noise of scarcity.

    The initiative has been associated with government-led education support programs in El Salvador under President Nayib Bukele’s administration, which has prioritised visible social interventions alongside broader security reforms. As noted by thisclaimer.com in its coverage of public welfare initiatives, such programs often carry a dual effect: practical support for families and a strong symbolic message about inclusion.

    One widely shared moment showed a young girl opening her kit and reacting with visible excitement. Not because it was luxurious, but because it was enough. And sometimes, enough is revolutionary in its own quiet, inconvenient way.

    DIGNITY, BUT MAKE IT PRACTICAL

    Here’s the uncomfortable part: school supplies shouldn’t feel like a headline. They should feel like background noise. Yet in many regions, they still function as a financial barrier disguised as a shopping list.

    Critics of large-scale distribution programs often point out logistical challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Fair. But supporters argue that immediate access matters more than theoretical perfection when children are currently sitting in classrooms without basic tools.

    And there’s a dry irony here: we live in a world where high-tech solutions for education are debated in conference rooms, while the simplest fix—actually giving kids what they need to learn—still qualifies as a policy achievement.

    The emotional centre of this story isn’t political branding or viral clips. It’s a child seeing possibility packaged in a backpack and not having to translate it into something else to understand it.

    Whether one views these initiatives as transformative policy or practical optics, the result on the ground is hard to ignore: fewer barriers between a child and a classroom.

    And maybe that’s the real headline nobody prints loudly enough: sometimes progress doesn’t arrive as disruption. Sometimes it just arrives on time.

    Sources list:
    UNICEF — https://www.unicef.org/
    World Bank Education Overview — https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/education
    Government of El Salvador — https://www.presidencia.gob.sv/
    BBC News Education Coverage — https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cp7r8vgl2lgt

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #art #books #childWelfare #education #elSalvador #globalEducation #nayibBukele #news #povertyReduction #publicPolicy #schoolKits #SocialImpact #unicef #viral #writing
  2. School Kits, Big Impact: Inside El Salvador’s Quiet Education Push

    Not just items—this is access, dignity, and a fair chance.

    Dear Cherubs, there’s something oddly powerful about a cardboard box that doesn’t contain chaos, delivery delays, or “please assemble yourself” furniture instructions. In El Salvador, it contains something far rarer: opportunity, neatly folded and mildly creased.

    Across the country, thousands of children have been receiving full school kits—uniforms, shoes, books, stationery, backpacks, and in some cases digital devices—aimed at reducing the everyday friction that keeps education just out of reach. According to UNICEF, such school supply initiatives are widely used in developing education systems to improve attendance and reduce dropout rates, especially among lower-income families.

    THE BOX THAT CHANGED THE MORNING ROUTINE

    On paper, it sounds simple: give kids the tools they need for school. In practice, it’s a quiet reshaping of daily life. No scrambling for notebooks. No “borrow a pen again?” conversations. Just a child getting ready for school without the background noise of scarcity.

    The initiative has been associated with government-led education support programs in El Salvador under President Nayib Bukele’s administration, which has prioritised visible social interventions alongside broader security reforms. As noted by thisclaimer.com in its coverage of public welfare initiatives, such programs often carry a dual effect: practical support for families and a strong symbolic message about inclusion.

    One widely shared moment showed a young girl opening her kit and reacting with visible excitement. Not because it was luxurious, but because it was enough. And sometimes, enough is revolutionary in its own quiet, inconvenient way.

    DIGNITY, BUT MAKE IT PRACTICAL

    Here’s the uncomfortable part: school supplies shouldn’t feel like a headline. They should feel like background noise. Yet in many regions, they still function as a financial barrier disguised as a shopping list.

    Critics of large-scale distribution programs often point out logistical challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Fair. But supporters argue that immediate access matters more than theoretical perfection when children are currently sitting in classrooms without basic tools.

    And there’s a dry irony here: we live in a world where high-tech solutions for education are debated in conference rooms, while the simplest fix—actually giving kids what they need to learn—still qualifies as a policy achievement.

    The emotional centre of this story isn’t political branding or viral clips. It’s a child seeing possibility packaged in a backpack and not having to translate it into something else to understand it.

    Whether one views these initiatives as transformative policy or practical optics, the result on the ground is hard to ignore: fewer barriers between a child and a classroom.

    And maybe that’s the real headline nobody prints loudly enough: sometimes progress doesn’t arrive as disruption. Sometimes it just arrives on time.

    Sources list:
    UNICEF — https://www.unicef.org/
    World Bank Education Overview — https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/education
    Government of El Salvador — https://www.presidencia.gob.sv/
    BBC News Education Coverage — https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cp7r8vgl2lgt

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #art #books #childWelfare #education #elSalvador #globalEducation #nayibBukele #news #povertyReduction #publicPolicy #schoolKits #SocialImpact #unicef #viral #writing
  3. School Kits, Big Impact: Inside El Salvador’s Quiet Education Push

    Not just items—this is access, dignity, and a fair chance.

    Dear Cherubs, there’s something oddly powerful about a cardboard box that doesn’t contain chaos, delivery delays, or “please assemble yourself” furniture instructions. In El Salvador, it contains something far rarer: opportunity, neatly folded and mildly creased.

    Across the country, thousands of children have been receiving full school kits—uniforms, shoes, books, stationery, backpacks, and in some cases digital devices—aimed at reducing the everyday friction that keeps education just out of reach. According to UNICEF, such school supply initiatives are widely used in developing education systems to improve attendance and reduce dropout rates, especially among lower-income families.

    THE BOX THAT CHANGED THE MORNING ROUTINE

    On paper, it sounds simple: give kids the tools they need for school. In practice, it’s a quiet reshaping of daily life. No scrambling for notebooks. No “borrow a pen again?” conversations. Just a child getting ready for school without the background noise of scarcity.

    The initiative has been associated with government-led education support programs in El Salvador under President Nayib Bukele’s administration, which has prioritised visible social interventions alongside broader security reforms. As noted by thisclaimer.com in its coverage of public welfare initiatives, such programs often carry a dual effect: practical support for families and a strong symbolic message about inclusion.

    One widely shared moment showed a young girl opening her kit and reacting with visible excitement. Not because it was luxurious, but because it was enough. And sometimes, enough is revolutionary in its own quiet, inconvenient way.

    DIGNITY, BUT MAKE IT PRACTICAL

    Here’s the uncomfortable part: school supplies shouldn’t feel like a headline. They should feel like background noise. Yet in many regions, they still function as a financial barrier disguised as a shopping list.

    Critics of large-scale distribution programs often point out logistical challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Fair. But supporters argue that immediate access matters more than theoretical perfection when children are currently sitting in classrooms without basic tools.

    And there’s a dry irony here: we live in a world where high-tech solutions for education are debated in conference rooms, while the simplest fix—actually giving kids what they need to learn—still qualifies as a policy achievement.

    The emotional centre of this story isn’t political branding or viral clips. It’s a child seeing possibility packaged in a backpack and not having to translate it into something else to understand it.

    Whether one views these initiatives as transformative policy or practical optics, the result on the ground is hard to ignore: fewer barriers between a child and a classroom.

    And maybe that’s the real headline nobody prints loudly enough: sometimes progress doesn’t arrive as disruption. Sometimes it just arrives on time.

    Sources list:
    UNICEF — https://www.unicef.org/
    World Bank Education Overview — https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/education
    Government of El Salvador — https://www.presidencia.gob.sv/
    BBC News Education Coverage — https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cp7r8vgl2lgt

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #art #books #childWelfare #education #elSalvador #globalEducation #nayibBukele #news #povertyReduction #publicPolicy #schoolKits #SocialImpact #unicef #viral #writing
  4. School Kits, Big Impact: Inside El Salvador’s Quiet Education Push

    Not just items—this is access, dignity, and a fair chance.

    Dear Cherubs, there’s something oddly powerful about a cardboard box that doesn’t contain chaos, delivery delays, or “please assemble yourself” furniture instructions. In El Salvador, it contains something far rarer: opportunity, neatly folded and mildly creased.

    Across the country, thousands of children have been receiving full school kits—uniforms, shoes, books, stationery, backpacks, and in some cases digital devices—aimed at reducing the everyday friction that keeps education just out of reach. According to UNICEF, such school supply initiatives are widely used in developing education systems to improve attendance and reduce dropout rates, especially among lower-income families.

    THE BOX THAT CHANGED THE MORNING ROUTINE

    On paper, it sounds simple: give kids the tools they need for school. In practice, it’s a quiet reshaping of daily life. No scrambling for notebooks. No “borrow a pen again?” conversations. Just a child getting ready for school without the background noise of scarcity.

    The initiative has been associated with government-led education support programs in El Salvador under President Nayib Bukele’s administration, which has prioritised visible social interventions alongside broader security reforms. As noted by thisclaimer.com in its coverage of public welfare initiatives, such programs often carry a dual effect: practical support for families and a strong symbolic message about inclusion.

    One widely shared moment showed a young girl opening her kit and reacting with visible excitement. Not because it was luxurious, but because it was enough. And sometimes, enough is revolutionary in its own quiet, inconvenient way.

    DIGNITY, BUT MAKE IT PRACTICAL

    Here’s the uncomfortable part: school supplies shouldn’t feel like a headline. They should feel like background noise. Yet in many regions, they still function as a financial barrier disguised as a shopping list.

    Critics of large-scale distribution programs often point out logistical challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Fair. But supporters argue that immediate access matters more than theoretical perfection when children are currently sitting in classrooms without basic tools.

    And there’s a dry irony here: we live in a world where high-tech solutions for education are debated in conference rooms, while the simplest fix—actually giving kids what they need to learn—still qualifies as a policy achievement.

    The emotional centre of this story isn’t political branding or viral clips. It’s a child seeing possibility packaged in a backpack and not having to translate it into something else to understand it.

    Whether one views these initiatives as transformative policy or practical optics, the result on the ground is hard to ignore: fewer barriers between a child and a classroom.

    And maybe that’s the real headline nobody prints loudly enough: sometimes progress doesn’t arrive as disruption. Sometimes it just arrives on time.

    Sources list:
    UNICEF — https://www.unicef.org/
    World Bank Education Overview — https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/education
    Government of El Salvador — https://www.presidencia.gob.sv/
    BBC News Education Coverage — https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cp7r8vgl2lgt

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #art #books #childWelfare #education #elSalvador #globalEducation #nayibBukele #news #povertyReduction #publicPolicy #schoolKits #SocialImpact #unicef #viral #writing
  5. School Kits, Big Impact: Inside El Salvador’s Quiet Education Push

    Not just items—this is access, dignity, and a fair chance.

    Dear Cherubs, there’s something oddly powerful about a cardboard box that doesn’t contain chaos, delivery delays, or “please assemble yourself” furniture instructions. In El Salvador, it contains something far rarer: opportunity, neatly folded and mildly creased.

    Across the country, thousands of children have been receiving full school kits—uniforms, shoes, books, stationery, backpacks, and in some cases digital devices—aimed at reducing the everyday friction that keeps education just out of reach. According to UNICEF, such school supply initiatives are widely used in developing education systems to improve attendance and reduce dropout rates, especially among lower-income families.

    THE BOX THAT CHANGED THE MORNING ROUTINE

    On paper, it sounds simple: give kids the tools they need for school. In practice, it’s a quiet reshaping of daily life. No scrambling for notebooks. No “borrow a pen again?” conversations. Just a child getting ready for school without the background noise of scarcity.

    The initiative has been associated with government-led education support programs in El Salvador under President Nayib Bukele’s administration, which has prioritised visible social interventions alongside broader security reforms. As noted by thisclaimer.com in its coverage of public welfare initiatives, such programs often carry a dual effect: practical support for families and a strong symbolic message about inclusion.

    One widely shared moment showed a young girl opening her kit and reacting with visible excitement. Not because it was luxurious, but because it was enough. And sometimes, enough is revolutionary in its own quiet, inconvenient way.

    DIGNITY, BUT MAKE IT PRACTICAL

    Here’s the uncomfortable part: school supplies shouldn’t feel like a headline. They should feel like background noise. Yet in many regions, they still function as a financial barrier disguised as a shopping list.

    Critics of large-scale distribution programs often point out logistical challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Fair. But supporters argue that immediate access matters more than theoretical perfection when children are currently sitting in classrooms without basic tools.

    And there’s a dry irony here: we live in a world where high-tech solutions for education are debated in conference rooms, while the simplest fix—actually giving kids what they need to learn—still qualifies as a policy achievement.

    The emotional centre of this story isn’t political branding or viral clips. It’s a child seeing possibility packaged in a backpack and not having to translate it into something else to understand it.

    Whether one views these initiatives as transformative policy or practical optics, the result on the ground is hard to ignore: fewer barriers between a child and a classroom.

    And maybe that’s the real headline nobody prints loudly enough: sometimes progress doesn’t arrive as disruption. Sometimes it just arrives on time.

    Sources list:
    UNICEF — https://www.unicef.org/
    World Bank Education Overview — https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/education
    Government of El Salvador — https://www.presidencia.gob.sv/
    BBC News Education Coverage — https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cp7r8vgl2lgt

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #art #books #childWelfare #education #elSalvador #globalEducation #nayibBukele #news #povertyReduction #publicPolicy #schoolKits #SocialImpact #unicef #viral #writing
  6. 🌍 𝗔𝗻 𝗶𝗻𝗱𝗲𝗽𝗲𝗻𝗱𝗲𝗻𝘁 “𝗴𝗿𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗼𝗺𝘆” 𝗽𝗮𝘁𝗵𝘄𝗮𝘆 𝗶𝗻 𝗔𝗳𝗿𝗶𝗰𝗮 🌿
    Africa imports processed wood products – even though it exports large quantities of timber. The result: massive trade deficits.
    In a research project conducted by CDE (@unibern ) & the African Forest Forum, a panel of experts explored ways to strengthen intra-African timber trade and promote legal, sustainable forestry – for the benefit of the #environment , more local jobs and #PovertyReduction.
    Read the story 👉 t.ly/TZvC2

  7. Tây Ninh đang đẩy mạnh chính sách giảm nghèo bền vững bằng cách tập trung tạo sinh kế lâu dài cho người dân. Thay vì chỉ dựa vào các gói cứu trợ tạm thời, tỉnh chú trọng hỗ trợ công cụ và phương thức sản xuất để người dân có thể tự lực vươn lên thoát nghèo bằng chính khả năng của mình.

    #TayNinh #GiamNgheo #AnSinhXaHoi #PhatTrienBenVung #Vietnam #PovertyReduction #SocialWelfare #SustainableDevelopment

    vtcnews.vn/tay-ninh-de-nguoi-d

  8. Tây Ninh đang đẩy mạnh chính sách giảm nghèo bền vững bằng cách tập trung tạo sinh kế lâu dài cho người dân. Thay vì chỉ dựa vào các gói cứu trợ tạm thời, tỉnh chú trọng hỗ trợ công cụ và phương thức sản xuất để người dân có thể tự lực vươn lên thoát nghèo bằng chính khả năng của mình.

    #TayNinh #GiamNgheo #AnSinhXaHoi #PhatTrienBenVung #Vietnam #PovertyReduction #SocialWelfare #SustainableDevelopment

    vtcnews.vn/tay-ninh-de-nguoi-d

  9. Tây Ninh đang từng bước ghi dấu ấn rõ nét trong hành trình giảm nghèo bền vững. Với nhiều chính sách thiết thực, hỗ trợ sinh kế, đào tạo nghề và tạo việc làm, tỉnh đã giúp hàng nghìn hộ thoát nghèo mỗi năm. Chất lượng cuộc sống người dân được cải thiện, đặc biệt ở vùng sâu, vùng biên giới. Một tương lai sáng hơn đang mở ra từ những nỗ lực không ngừng nghỉ.

    #TâyNinh #GiamNgheo #PhatTrien #ThoiSu #TayNinh #PovertyReduction #SustainableDevelopment #VietnamNews

    vtcnews.vn/tay-ninh-tren-han

  10. Tây Ninh đang từng bước ghi dấu ấn rõ nét trong hành trình giảm nghèo bền vững. Với nhiều chính sách thiết thực, hỗ trợ sinh kế, đào tạo nghề và tạo việc làm, tỉnh đã giúp hàng nghìn hộ thoát nghèo mỗi năm. Chất lượng cuộc sống người dân được cải thiện, đặc biệt ở vùng sâu, vùng biên giới. Một tương lai sáng hơn đang mở ra từ những nỗ lực không ngừng nghỉ.

    #TâyNinh #GiamNgheo #PhatTrien #ThoiSu #TayNinh #PovertyReduction #SustainableDevelopment #VietnamNews

    vtcnews.vn/tay-ninh-tren-han

  11. 🛠️ Tây Ninh thực hiện chủ trương “trao cần câu, không trao con cá”, triển khai mô hình giảm nghèo bền vững, tạo sinh kế cho phụ nữ vùng biên giới: đào tạo kỹ năng, hỗ trợ vốn, kết nối thị trường. #PovertyReduction #WomenEmpowerment #SustainableLivelihood #TâyNinh #PhụNữ #BiênGiới #GiảmNghèo

    vtcnews.vn/tao-sinh-ke-cho-phu

  12. 🛠️ Tây Ninh thực hiện chủ trương “trao cần câu, không trao con cá”, triển khai mô hình giảm nghèo bền vững, tạo sinh kế cho phụ nữ vùng biên giới: đào tạo kỹ năng, hỗ trợ vốn, kết nối thị trường. #PovertyReduction #WomenEmpowerment #SustainableLivelihood #TâyNinh #PhụNữ #BiênGiới #GiảmNghèo

    vtcnews.vn/tao-sinh-ke-cho-phu

  13. Các già làng vùng cao A Lưới (Huế) đóng vai trò "linh hồn", dẫn dắt người dân thoát nghèo bên cạnh các chính sách hỗ trợ của Nhà nước. Uy tín và kinh nghiệm của họ là chìa khóa để thay đổi cuộc sống!
    #A Lưới #Huế #xoáđói giảmnghèo #ngườ có uy tín #vùngcao #povertyreduction #highlands #Vietnam

    vtcnews.vn/cac-gia-lang-linh-h

  14. Các già làng vùng cao A Lưới (Huế) đóng vai trò "linh hồn", dẫn dắt người dân thoát nghèo bên cạnh các chính sách hỗ trợ của Nhà nước. Uy tín và kinh nghiệm của họ là chìa khóa để thay đổi cuộc sống!
    #A Lưới #Huế #xoáđói giảmnghèo #ngườ có uy tín #vùngcao #povertyreduction #highlands #Vietnam

    vtcnews.vn/cac-gia-lang-linh-h

  15. **📢 Bộ đội nơi biên cương: Xây dựng công trình, vun đắp lòng dân**

    Những công trình dân sinh, dự án hỗ trợ sản xuất từ Chương trình MTQG 1719 do Quân đội triển khai đã góp phần giảm nghèo bền vững, đồng thời củng cố niềm tin của đồng bào vùng biên giới với Đảng và Nhà nước. Qua từng việc làm thiết thực, "thế trận lòng dân" ngày càng vững chắc nơi biên cương Tổ quốc.

    #BộĐộiViệtNam #BiênGiới #GiảmNghèo #LòngDân #QuốcPhòngAnNinh #VietnamBorder #PovertyReduction #PeopleTrust #NationalDefense #Vie

  16. Đồng bào dân tộc thiểu số Nghệ An đang thay đổi tư duy, vươn lên làm giàu. Thu nhập bình quân tăng, tỷ lệ hộ nghèo giảm mạnh. Hàng trăm công trình hạ tầng được đầu tư, mang lại bước phát triển mới cho vùng DTTS&miền núi.

    #dântộcthiểusố #NghệAn #pháttriểnkinhtế #giảmnghèo #hạtầng #dântộc #cộngđồng #vươnlên #làmgiàu #ethnicminorities #development #povertyreduction #infrastructure #prosperity #NgheAn #Vietnamese #communitydevelopment

    vietnamnet.vn/dong-bao-dan-toc

  17. Phú Thọ quyết tâm giảm tỷ lệ hộ nghèo xuống 2.75% vào cuối năm 2025 thông qua phong trào "Vì người nghèo - Không để ai bị bỏ lại phía sau". Mục tiêu là cơ bản không còn hộ nghèo trên địa bàn tỉnh.
    #PhúThọ #giảmnghèo #xóađói #vichongheo #PhuTho #povertyreduction #socialequality

    vietnamnet.vn/phu-tho-dat-muc-

  18. Gia Lai quyết tâm giảm nghèo bền vững tại 77 xã, phường phía Tây vào năm 2025! Mục tiêu là giảm nghèo đa chiều, hạn chế tái nghèo và phát sinh nghèo mới.

    #GiaLai #GiảmNghèo #PovertyReduction #ViệtNam #Vietnam

    vietnamnet.vn/gia-lai-quyet-gi

  19. Thái Nguyên giảm tỷ lệ hộ nghèo xuống 5.46% vào cuối năm 2024, vượt kế hoạch nhờ phong trào "Vì người nghèo - Không để ai bị bỏ lại phía sau".

    #TháiNguyên #giảmnghèo #phongtraothiđua #povertyreduction #Vietnam #ViệtNam

    vietnamnet.vn/thai-nguyen-ty-l

  20. Quảng Ngãi đẩy mạnh phong trào giảm nghèo bền vững 2021-2025, tập trung đa dạng hóa sinh kế, phát triển giáo dục nghề nghiệp. Hỗ trợ xây dựng và nhân rộng hơn 20 mô hình giảm nghèo.
    #QuangNgai #GiamNgheo #Vietnam #QuảngNgãi #GiảmNghèo #ViệtNam #PovertyReduction

    vietnamnet.vn/quang-ngai-ho-tr

  21. Nghệ An tập trung giảm nghèo bền vững bằng cách đào tạo nghề, hỗ trợ sinh kế và đa dạng hóa sản xuất cho người dân. Các chương trình mục tiêu quốc gia được triển khai để xây dựng cơ sở hạ tầng và tạo kết nối việc làm.
    #NghệAn #GiảmNghèo #ĐàoTạoNghề #HỗTrợSinhKế #ĐaDạngHóaSảnXuất #NgheAn #PovertyReduction #VocationalTraining #LivelihoodSupport #ProductionDiversification

    vietnamnet.vn/nghe-an-giam-ngh

  22. Nâng cao đời sống và giảm nghèo bền vững cho đồng bào dân tộc thiểu số (DTTS) là nhiệm vụ trọng tâm. Bộ Dân tộc và Tôn giáo đang triển khai các hoạt động để hỗ trợ và phát triển cộng đồng DTTS.
    #DTTS #Vietnam #dantoc #giảmnghèo #phattrien #ethnicminorities #povertyreduction #development

    vietnamnet.vn/nang-cao-doi-son

  23. Thanh Hóa đặt mục tiêu đến năm 2030 giảm tỷ lệ nghèo đa chiều xuống dưới 1%! 💪 Nỗ lực này nằm trong phong trào "Vì người nghèo - Không để ai bị bỏ lại phía sau" nhằm nâng cao đời sống cho người dân nông thôn.

    #ThanhHóa #GiảmNghèo #VìNgườiNghèo #XóaĐóiGiảmNghèo #PovertyReduction #ThanhHoa #Vietnam

    vietnamnet.vn/thanh-hoa-phan-d

  24. Thứ trưởng Hồ Văn Niên nhấn mạnh mục tiêu giảm nghèo bền vững, không để tái nghèo tại tỉnh Khánh Hòa, đặc biệt chú trọng vào giáo dục và y tế.
    #giảmnghèo #KhánhHòa #chínhsách
    #povertyreduction #KhanhHoa #policy

    vietnamnet.vn/thu-truong-ho-va

  25. 🇻🇳 Bài viết nhấn mạnh về những thành tựu trong công tác dân tộc, tôn giáo, đặc biệt là giảm nghèo ở vùng dân tộc thiểu số và sự đồng hành của các tôn giáo. Những kết quả này củng cố niềm tin của nhân dân và nâng cao vị thế của Việt Nam.

    #dantoc #tongiao #giảmnghèo #vietnam #ethnicminorities #religion #povertyreduction #việtnam

    vietnamnet.vn/cong-tac-dan-toc

  26. "The minimum wage in Mexico has more than doubled in real terms over the last six years. This is no small feat, especially if we take into account that the policy neither led to feared job losses nor price increases. This was partly because the Mexican minimum wage was well below those of other Latin American countries. With the latest increase, however, Mexico’s minimum wage is now greater than those in half of the region. Each successive increase has helped more people—in the first year, the increase benefited 13.3 percent of the formal labor force and by 2025 it benefited 37.4 percent, representing around 8.4 million workers.

    With the radical shift in Mexico’s wage policy, these recent increases in the minimum wage—while translating into an average income growth of 25 percent in real terms and a significant decrease in poverty and inequality—have only begun to chip away at corporate power. The share of wages has only grown slightly, and the negligible increase in unemployment and inflation underscores drastic asymmetries in the relationship between employers and workers. The Mexican labor market is extremely monopsonistic, in part because there are relatively few large companies, but also due to poor labor law enforcement and weak unions. Common labor practices in Mexico allow firms to exercise more power to determine wages well below what they would be in a perfectly competitive market, which has led to the prevalence of high profits at the expense of working conditions.

    Analyzing the historical evolution of the minimum wage in Mexico is fundamental to understanding how the Mexican wage policy has become a successful and innovative model. Its implementation has reduced poverty for millions of people and generated unprecedented growth in family income, defying traditional forecasts that linked minimum wage increases with uncontrolled inflation and unemployment."

    phenomenalworld.org/analysis/m

    #Mexico #MinimumWage #Poverty #PovertyReduction #Monopsony

  27. Worldwide poverty is falling—even under the new, higher thresholds announced by the World Bank.

    India now accounts for over a third of people lifted from extreme poverty in a decade.

    Under the revised $3/day threshold, the extreme poverty rate in India has plummeted from 27.1% in 2012 to 5.3% in 2023.

    That’s nearly 270 million people! #PovertyReduction #India

  28. The global economy is healing, with extreme poverty levels returning to pre-pandemic rates.

    Notably, India eliminated extreme poverty defined as living on $1.90 a day.

    Let's celebrate these strides! #Economy #PovertyReduction

  29. Gutierrez's experience highlights the profound impact of regular cash flow. "I had that financial stability... those $500 stretched a long way," she said. The dialogue around cash support continues, emphasizing the dignity it brings to families. #CashTransfers #PovertyReduction

  30. Gutierrez's experience highlights the profound impact of regular cash flow. "I had that financial stability... those $500 stretched a long way," she said. The dialogue around cash support continues, emphasizing the dignity it brings to families. #CashTransfers #PovertyReduction

  31. Gutierrez's experience highlights the profound impact of regular cash flow. "I had that financial stability... those $500 stretched a long way," she said. The dialogue around cash support continues, emphasizing the dignity it brings to families. #CashTransfers #PovertyReduction

  32. Gutierrez's experience highlights the profound impact of regular cash flow. "I had that financial stability... those $500 stretched a long way," she said. The dialogue around cash support continues, emphasizing the dignity it brings to families.

  33. Gutierrez's experience highlights the profound impact of regular cash flow. "I had that financial stability... those $500 stretched a long way," she said. The dialogue around cash support continues, emphasizing the dignity it brings to families. #CashTransfers #PovertyReduction

  34. I'm pretty skeptical of initiatives to give technology to help people in very poor, very remote parts of the world. They have a tendency to break after a while, and just end up as garbage because it can't be repaired.

    But this project seems to have thought about this in a good way, and focus on making these all terrain wheelchairs easily maintainable and repairable.

    Seems worth supporting? What do you think?

    31 hours left

    kickstarter.com/projects/safar

    #PovertyReduction #charity #disability

  35. Uzbekistan is aiming to reduce its poverty rate from 11% to 7% by 2027 through comprehensive economic and social reforms. The government is focusing on boosting private sector growth, improving social protection, and enhancing access to education and healthcare. Significant funds will be allocated to regions with high poverty levels to support families directly.

    #Uzbekistan #PovertyReduction #EconomicDevelopment #SocialReform #GoodNews

    @goodnews

    timesca.com/uzbekistan-targets