17 June 2010
UNDP puts forward eight-point action agenda to reduce poverty
Based on evidence from 50 countries, the MDGs can be achieved, says Report
New York —The
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched, today, an extensive assessment of what must be done to advance sustainable
development and reduce global poverty. The report, titled What Will It Take To Achieve The Millennium Development Goals?
An International Assessment, identifies a concrete action agenda to inform the outcome of the World leaders’ MDG Summit
in New York, this September.
“For the many people living in poverty, the Millennium Development Goals are not abstract
and aspirational targets; they offer a means to a better life, and overall a more just and peaceful world,” said UNDP Administrator
Helen Clark at the launch. “Our hope is that this evidence of tried and tested policies, and this agenda for accelerating
the pace of success, informs a positive outcome at the world leaders summit on the MDGs in September", Helen Clark added.
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| Goal 5: Improve maternal health. |
The
MDGs are eight internationally-agreed targets which aim to reduce poverty, hunger, maternal and child deaths, disease, inadequate
shelter, gender inequality and environmental degradation by 2015.
Drawing on evidence of what has worked in 50
countries, UNDP’s report provides an eight-point MDG action agenda to accelerate and sustain development progress over the
next five years. The eight points focus on supporting nationally-owned and participatory development; pro-poor, job-rich inclusive
growth including the private sector; government investments in social services like health and education; expanding opportunities
for women and girls; access to low carbon energy; domestic resource mobilization; and delivery on Official Development Assistance
commitments.
From the abolition of primary school fees leading to a surge in enrolment in Ethiopia to innovative
health servicing options in Afghanistan reducing under-five child mortality, the report brings forward concrete examples that
have worked and can be replicated, even in the poorest countries, to make real progress across the Goals.
Rapid
improvements in both education and health, the report illustrates, have occurred in countries where there were adequate
public expenditures and strong new partnerships.
Evidence found in the Assessment also suggests that reductions
in poverty and hunger occur when economic growth is job-rich and boosts agricultural production. Ghana’s
nationwide fertilizer subsidy programme, for instance, increased food production by 40 percent and reduced hunger by nine
percent between 2003 and 2005.
Other examples include a national rural employment initiative in India which has
benefited some 46 million households. The programme guarantees a minimum of 100 days of work for landless labourers and marginal
farmers, with almost half being women. Such robust social protection and employment programmes, the report
affirms, reduce poverty and reverse inequality.
Albania was praised for adopting a ninth MDG, reforming public
administration, legislation and policies to promote accountability and enhance development results. Country-led development
and effective government, argues the report, are at the root of achieving the MDGs.
The Assessment
also denotes the linkages between many of the Goals. For example, improving opportunities for women and girls
and expanding access to energy, both, have a multiplier effect on MDG progress. The provision of generators
in Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali and Senegal, has helped to free up an average of two to four hours per day for women, which they
have been able to spend on education, improving their health and generating additional sources of revenue.
This
Assessment finds that well-targeted and predictable aid is a critical catalyst for meeting the MDGs and has
produced significant results in Burkina Faso, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda and Vietnam by making more resources available for
service delivery. Evidence, however, also suggests that countries need to expand their own domestic resource mobilization
and to adjust their budgets to ensure maximum return on their investment.
The report, which will be shared with
Member States as they prepare the outcome document for the September MDG Summit, also singles out the failure to conclude
the World Trade Organization’s Doha Development Round of trade negotiations as the most significant gap in formulating a global
partnership for development. In addition, market access for developing countries is little improved and domestic agricultural
subsidies by rich countries continue to overshadow policy coherence needed to accelerate MDG progress.
To work
in tandem with this report, UNDP is also piloting an MDG acceleration toolkit. It is a framework designed to help governments,
the UN at the country level and other development partners identify where the real bottlenecks to progress lie and, in tackling
them, which policies can have the most impact on achieving the MDGs.
Resources
Helen
Clark's remarks at the launch of the report
Download a
copy of the International Assessment (PDF, 1.3Mb)
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