Income share held by lowest 10% - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Percentage share of income or consumption is the share that accrues to subgroups of population indicated by deciles or quintiles.

Source: World Bank, Development Research Group. Data are based on primary household survey data obtained from government statistical agencies and World Bank country departments. Data for high-income economies are from the Luxembourg Income Study database. For mor

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Algeria 4.00 2011
2 Egypt 3.80 2017
3 Guinea 3.50 2018
4 Sierra Leone 3.40 2018
5 Guinea-Bissau 3.30 2018
6 Niger 3.20 2018
6 Sudan 3.20 2014
6 Tunisia 3.20 2015
9 Mali 3.10 2018
10 Mauritania 3.00 2014
10 The Gambia 3.00 2015
10 Senegal 3.00 2018
13 Tanzania 2.90 2018
13 Chad 2.90 2018
13 Liberia 2.90 2016
13 Mauritius 2.90 2017
13 Malawi 2.90 2019
13 Nigeria 2.90 2018
13 Ethiopia 2.90 2015
13 Benin 2.90 2018
13 Côte d'Ivoire 2.90 2018
22 Burundi 2.80 2013
23 Morocco 2.70 2013
24 Seychelles 2.60 2018
24 São Tomé and Principe 2.60 2017
26 Zimbabwe 2.50 2017
27 Uganda 2.40 2019
27 Kenya 2.40 2015
27 Rwanda 2.40 2016
30 Burkina Faso 2.30 2018
30 Togo 2.30 2018
32 Gabon 2.20 2017
32 Cabo Verde 2.20 2015
32 Madagascar 2.20 2012
35 Dem. Rep. Congo 2.10 2012
36 Djibouti 1.90 2017
37 Cameroon 1.70 2014
37 Lesotho 1.70 2017
39 Mozambique 1.60 2014
39 Congo 1.60 2011
39 Comoros 1.60 2014
39 Ghana 1.60 2016
43 Botswana 1.50 2015
44 Eswatini 1.40 2016
45 Angola 1.30 2018
46 Central African Republic 1.20 2008
47 Namibia 1.00 2015
47 Zambia 1.00 2015
49 South Africa 0.90 2014

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: The World Bank Group’s goal of promoting shared prosperity has been defined as fostering income growth of the bottom 40 per cent of the welfare distribution in every country. Income distribution data and the Gini coefficient measure inequality in income or consumption and important indicators for measuring shared prosperity.

Limitations and Exceptions: Despite progress in the last decade, the challenges of measuring poverty remain. The timeliness, frequency, quality, and comparability of household surveys need to increase substantially, particularly in the poorest countries. The availability and quality of poverty monitoring data remains low in small states, countries with fragile situations, and low-income countries and even some middle-income countries. The low frequency and lack of comparability of the data available in some countries create uncertainty over the magnitude of poverty reduction. Besides the frequency and timeliness of survey data, other data quality issues arise in measuring household living standards. The surveys ask detailed questions on sources of income and how it was spent, which must be carefully recorded by trained personnel. Income is generally more difficult to measure accurately, and consumption comes closer to the notion of living standards. And income can vary over time even if living standards do not. But consumption data are not always available: the latest estimates reported here use consumption data for about two-thirds of countries. However, even similar surveys may not be strictly comparable because of differences in timing or in the quality and training of enumerators. Comparisons of countries at different levels of development also pose a potential problem because of differences in the relative importance of the consumption of nonmarket goods. The local market value of all consumption in kind (including own production, particularly important in underdeveloped rural economies) should be included in total consumption expenditure but may not be. Most survey data now include valuations for consumption or income from own production, but valuation methods vary.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Inequality in the distribution of income is reflected in the share of income or consumption accruing to a portion of the population ranked by income or consumption levels. The portions ranked lowest by personal income receive the smallest shares of total income. Data on the distribution of income or consumption come from nationally representative household surveys. Where the original data from the household survey were available, they have been used to directly calculate the income or consumption shares by quintile. Otherwise, shares have been estimated from the best available grouped data. The distribution data have been adjusted for household size, providing a more consistent measure of per capita income or consumption. No adjustment has been made for spatial differences in cost of living within countries, because the data needed for such calculations are generally unavailable. For further details on the estimation method for low- and middle-income economies, see Ravallion and Chen (1996). Survey year is the year in which the underlying household survey data were collected or, when the data collection period bridged two calendar years, the year in which most of the data were collected. Percentage shares by quintile may not sum to 100 because of rounding.

Unit of Measure: %

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: The World Bank’s internationally comparable poverty monitoring database now draws on income or detailed consumption data from more than one thousand six hundred household surveys across 164 countries in six regions and 25 other high income countries (indu