a. Includes primary education, basic life skills for youth, adults and early childhood education, basic health care, basic health infrastructure, basic nutrition, infectious disease control, health education, health personnel development, population policy and administrative management, reproductive health care, family planning, sexually transmitted disease control including HIV/AIDS, personnel development for population and reproductive health, basic drinking water supply and basic sanitation, and multi-sector aid for basic social services.
b. Calculated by World Bank staff using the World Integrated Trade solution based on the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development's Trade Analysis and Information Systems database
c. Refers to the Enhanced HIPC Initiative.
d. Assistance includes topping up at completion point.
a. Based on nominal per capita consumption averages and distributions estimated parametrically from unit-record household survey data, unless otherwise noted.
b. Refers to the period of reference of a survey. If the period of reference of a survey covers multiple years, the first year is reported as the reference year.
c. Estimated non-parametrically from nominal income per capita distributions based on unit-record household survey data.
d. Covers urban areas only.
e. The 2011 PPP is not reliable. Use 2005 PPP instead. Thus, the $1.9 and $3.1 poverty lines correspond to $1.25 and $2, respectively.
f. Based on Purchasing Power parity (PPP) dollars imputed using regression.
g. Based on benchmark national PPP estimate re-scaled to account for cost-of-living differences in urban and rural areas. The national estimates are the population weighted average of urban and rural estimates.
h. Estimated non-parametrically from nominal consumption per capita distributions based on grouped household survey data.
i. Based on per capita income averages and distribution data estimated parametrically from grouped household survey data.
Statistical tables that were previously available in the World Development Indicators print edition are now available online. Using an automated query process, these reference tables will be consistently updated based on the revisions to the World Development Indicators database. These reference tables were built using DataBank (http://databank.worldbank.org), an online web resource that provides simple and quick access to collections of time series data. It has advanced functions for selecting and displaying data, performing customized queries, downloading data, and creating charts and maps. DataBank reports can be easily edited, shared, and embedded as widgets on websites or blogs. For more information, see http://databank.worldbank.org/help. Cell level metadata and values for years other than those specified can be highlighted by clicking the show metadata checkbox.
This section describes the color codes used in the table.