Life is the only treasure that a human being possesses. However, due to some tragic circumstances this valuable riches could be lost forever. It is extremely painful to realize that someone could deprive his or her life simply because of the shortage of potable water or food supply. According to the contemporary article “Poverty Facts and Stats” near one and a half million people die from hunger and famine-related diseases every year (Shah, 2010). This horrifying statistic explicitly points out the depth of a challenging social and economic situation in the World. In fact, growing interest to the problem of poverty optimistically convinces that despite the complexity of the issue global communities take it into careful consideration and attempt to improve this sphere of social life in the nearest future. Nevertheless, a threat of the World Poverty is still an unresolved significant dilemma of the modernity; therefore International organizations must urgently arrange some efficient anti-poverty measures in order to adjust severe destitution. Initially, in order to consider the phenomena of World beggary it is vitally essential to accurately define the very notion of poverty. British sociologist Peter Townsend (as cited in Gordon, 1995) provided the scientific explanation of the term “pauperism” (from Latin - “poor”) as the state of seriously limited individual or family resources “excluded from ordinary living patterns, customs and activities” (Gordon, 2002, p. 3). Thus, regarding this conception of squalor it could be mentioned that poverty generally refers to material conditions, such as low standard of living and malnutrition, and economic status dependent from a scarcity of income support (An introduction to Social Policy, 2007). Furthermore, any existing problem indisputably has some causes which have provoked a series of difficulties connected with a World Poverty issue. Hence, there are three major reasons of the penurity trend emergence deduced by Anup Shah (2009). Meanwhile, the first cause is the huge external debts of poverty-stricken countries which they hardly may defray due to the unsustainable industrial market development. For instance, with reference to the official World Bank data (as cited in Sassen, 2010) overall debt of the developing countries in 2006 made up approximately three trillion dollars; admittedly, only after several decades this loan would be repaid. Additionally, the second significant factor affected to global necessity is a food deficit and a lack of potable water supply. Nowadays near 800 million people in the World suffer from a chronic undernourishment and inadequate access to clean water, which subsequently leads to anti-sanitarian living conditions and weak immune system (Shah, 2010). Technological and industrial backwardness of poverty-stricken countries could be considered as the third precondition to the mass poverty. Despite dramatic technological progress there are still vulnerable regions deprived of some modern technical devices; it is a striking feature that thousands of females in the African continent spend several hours each day extracting and collecting water for their families (World Poverty: Problems, n.d.). Generally, there are two broad categories of population captured under the influence of disastrous deprivations – adults and children. These groups were selected by the age approach; they differ from each other by mortality level mostly. Also, it is necessary to emphasize that the high mortality rate is the one of negative destitution impacts. On average, infant death trend always prevails adults’ one because young immune system might not resist appalling life conditions for a long period of time