The World Bank has announced a major revision to global poverty estimates, raising the International Poverty Line (IPL) from $2.15/day (2017 PPP) to $3.00/day (2021 PPP). While the change led to a global increase in the count of extreme poverty by 125 million, India emerged as a statistical outlier in a positive direction.
Using more refined data and updated survey methods, India not only withstood the raised threshold but also demonstrated a massive reduction in poverty.
The new poverty line would have increased the count of global extreme poverty by 226 million people. But thanks to India’s data revision, the net global increase was only 125 million — as India’s revised data reduced the count by 125 million on its own.
Why the Poverty Line Was Revised and India’s Influence
The new IPL reflects:
India’s updated consumption data significantly influenced the World Bank’s global benchmark. Improved methods captured more actual spending, leading to a more realistic poverty line and a lower poverty rate despite the increase in threshold.
Most of this upward revision is explained by revisions in the underlying national poverty lines rather than a change in prices. — World Bank
India’s Revised Poverty Profile (PIP 2025)
India’s latest Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) adopted the Modified Mixed Recall Period (MMRP) method, replacing the outdated Uniform Reference Period (URP). This shift:
As a result, consumption recorded in national surveys rose, leading to a drop in poverty estimates:
Year |
Poverty Line (PPP/day) |
Poverty Rate |
People Below Poverty Line |
2011–12 |
$2.15 (2017) |
16.22% |
~205.9 million |
2011-12 |
$3.00 (2021) |
27.12% |
~344.47 million |
2022–23 |
$2.15 (2017) |
2.35% |
~33.6 million |
2022–23 |
$3.00 (2021) |
5.25% |
~75.2 million |
Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES), 2023–24
Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) is designed to collect information on consumption and expenditure of the households on goods and services. Key highlights of the HCES for 2023–24 are:
These findings complement the World Bank's revised figures, reinforcing the conclusion that poverty in India has reduced not just statistically, but through tangible improvements in household living standards and incomes.
Conclusion: A Story of Measurement and Momentum
India’s poverty decline is a story of technical refinement meeting policy results. In the face of a raised poverty benchmark, India showed that more honest data, not diluted standards, can reveal real progress.
As the global community recalibrates poverty goals, India’s example sets a precedent: evidence-based governance, sustained reforms, and methodological integrity can together deliver transformational outcomes.
By Santosh Kumar | Sarla Meena | Rishita Aggarwal