That is precisely my point. Those graphs are not meant to be compared. Comparison happens across similar time lines.
Precisely that is why I didn't quote the World Bank figures to begin with - I quoted the UNDP ones which are not only based on measures that address Poverty more intensely but are much up to date !
Again have a look at the graph. The objective of the graph was to measure poverty reduction across South Asian countries.
The objective of the Graph was to project Poverty Reduction across South Asia judging by the growth rates of what they'd be in 2013 !
Those criterion have already been soundly negated by the World Bank figures in their DATABANK in 2006 !
You seems confused...depreciation happens with respect to another currency. It is simple, with depreciation PKR become cheaper with respect to Dollar, hence to earn the same dollar you need to earn more PKR
You seem to have missed the whole point !
A depreciation of the PKR means that more PKR are needed to buy the same amount of Dollars !
Were we calculating Poverty as earnings of less than PKR 100 a day it would've made sense but because we're calculating in Dollar Terms it doesn't effect it because naturally if the Currency has depreciated from (say!) PKR 50 to a Dollar in 2005 to PKR 60 to a Dollar in 2006 & the Poverty Rates have gone down from 23.9% to 22.3% more people are earning more PKRs to reach the $1.25 Poverty Line or $1 as I presume it was back then !
I am not sure about the figures for Pakistan, but forget the effects of depreciation, poverty reduction can even happen if average per capita declines. Take a situation, where poor becomes poorer but middle class become richer. Per capita is average and not absolute.
Exactly & that is precisely why the UNDP created the Multidimensional Poverty Index & only quoted World Bank Figures in comparison to it !
According to it our figures are beyond shameful !
Yes, inflation goes into GNI, but so does PKR/USD exchange rate
Where have I said it doesn't ? I simply tried to state that a GNI which is Dollar based only means that if the Rupee has depreciated then more Rupees would be needed to register the same Dollar equivalents as the value pre depreciation & much more if an increment is to be recorded - Naturally if the depreciation is there & the GNI is still increasing then we've gone for the latter most of the aforementioned situations !
I would not question world bank calculations. World Bank recognizes how important those figures are.
Nor am I questioning World Bank Figures - I'm questioning 2-3 Graphs that happen to be linked to the World Bank Page that are neither found in their DATABANK nor come up in their Search Function nor have been utilized by another credible organization - the UNDP - when it sought to give a Poverty Comparative !
In the last decade Pakistan on an average grew by just 3% per year. There was country wide anarchy in last decade with almost 50,000 death registered due to terrorist violence. Unemployment reached new heights. There was no power supply for Industry. Industrial output has fallen so are Exports. Forex reserves have fallen. Now tell me how can poverty decrease. To decrease poverty you require productive avenues for employment of both resources and people, which was squarely absent. I see no reason not to think that poverty in fact has increased in Pakistan.
And yet neither the HDI which takes into account Life Expectancy, Education & Wealth agrees with that assessment !
Nor have Pakistan's Exports fallen !
Nor have we registered a decrease in our GDP or GNI growth or their per capita growth !
Lastly when it comes to the Unemployment Rate in 2009 it was 5.5% in Pakistan as per the ILO whereas in 2013 it was 6.0% - a 0.5% increment can't possibly off-set a reduction in inflation of 1.2-1.3% a year in '06 ! (
http://www.ilo.org/ilostat/faces/home/statisticaldata/data_by_country/country-details?country=PAK&_afrLoop=1855735428337884#@?_afrLoop=1855735428337884&country=PAK&_adf.ctrl-state=fuerbdb68_171 - Should you wish to you check the 2013 figures from the Short Term Indicators section where there is an Excel file to the name of Unemployment Rate)
So in a way whereas our GDP Growth has been stunted & our Unemployment Rate increased by 0.5% owing to a larger population there is nothing to suggest that there has been an increase in Poverty Levels in Pakistan especially when the previous Data by World Bank suggests something else & the latest data by the UNDP suggests something else as well !