Castaneda Aguilar, R. AndresCastillo, AdrianaDevpura, Nancy P.Dewina, RenoDiaz-Bonilla, CarolinaEdochie, IfeanyiFarfan Bertran, Maria G.Fernandez Romero, JaimeFoster, ElizabethFujs, Tony H. M. J.Gonzalez Icaza, Maria F.Jolliffe, DeanKnippenberg, Erwin W.Krishnan, NandiniLakner, ChristopherLara Ibarra, GabrielLestani, Diego G.Mahler, Daniel G.Montalvo Talledo, Veronica S.Montes, JoseNguyen, Minh C.Olivieri, SergioPaffhausen, Anna LuisaRedaelli, SilviaSaavedra, Trinidad B.Sanchez Castro, Diana M.Tetteh-Baah, Samuel K.Viveros Mendoza, Martha C.Wu, HaoyuYonzan, NishantYoshida, Nobuo2024-04-012024-04-012024-04-01https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41341The March 2024 update to the Poverty and Inequality Platform (PIP) involves several changes to the data underlying the global poverty estimates. In particular, some welfare aggregates have been revised, and the CPI, national accounts, and population input data have been updated. This document explains these changes in detail and the reasoning behind them. Moreover, 101 new country-years have been added, bringing the total number of surveys to more than 2,300. Depending on the availability of recent survey data, global and regional poverty estimates are reported up to 2022. This is the first time PIP is reporting global poverty estimates post-2019, covering the period of the COVID-19 pandemic.en-USCC BY-NC 3.0 IGOWHAT'S NEWMARCH 2024PIPNO POVERTYGOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEINGMarch 2024 Update to the Poverty and Inequality Platform (PIP)Working PaperWorld BankWhat’s New10.1596/41341