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GDP per capita is generally lower, and poverty rates are generally higher, in countries with lower standards of living.
Equality, better living standards, full employment, little or no poverty. To name a few.
Poverty incidence among Filipino families increased from 24.4 percent in 2003 to 26.9 percent in 2006. Poverty incidence refers to the proportion of families or individuals with per capita income less than the per capita poverty threshold to the total number of families or individuals.
Poverty can effect candians because some canadians are poor and homeless. When they are poor and homeless they can't make a living.
After a war, people in poverty "often" will regain there foothold on living standards by learning from their observations learned during the war. They will put "lessons learned" to use.
One good location to find information about standards of living is the website Wikipedia. Though it can be difficult to define exactly what constitutes a good (or bad) standard of living, it is generally agreed that the GDP (gross domestic product) per capita is a solid baseline to start with.
People living in poverty suffer more from diseases than richer people, since poor people cannot afford to go to the doctor or to buy the medicine needed to treat diseases.
what is the living standards of hawaii
France, they had one of the largest populations in Europe.
"Poverty is defined relative to the standards of living in a society at a specific time. People live in poverty when they are denied an income sufficient for their material needs and when these circumstances exclude them from taking part in activities which are an accepted part of daily life in that society." So the answer is no, it isn't.
It's worse than poverty.
Living the life of poverty