|
Back to Index
Millennium
development goals global monitoring report 2007
The
World Bank
Circa May 2007
http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs/default.asp?2,40,3,1279
Download 21 page report overview
- Adobe
PDF version (161KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Visit www.sarpn.org.za/documents/d0002516
to download the full 274 page document (1.2 MB)
Broad-based global economic growth in 2006, and more generally since
2000, provides grounds for optimism about progress in advancing
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). For low-income countries,
real per capita income growth in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia
has been stronger in the period since 2000 than at any time since
the 1960s, and stronger than at any time since transition in Europe
and Central Asian countries. Based on this strong growth performance,
the estimated number of extremely poor people (living on $1 per
day) fell by 135 million between 1999 and 2004.
Although still
uneven, progress with poverty reduction is evident across all regions.
Sub-Saharan Africa reduced the share of people living in extreme
poverty by 4.7 percentage points over five years to 41 percent,
although high population growth left the same absolute number of
poor, at nearly 300 million. South Asia, Latin America, and East
Asia all appear to be roughly on track to halve extreme poverty
by 2015 from 1990 levels. Europe, Central Asia, and the Middle East
and North Africa have largely eliminated extreme poverty. There
are also hopeful signs that international development efforts may
be gaining momentum, and new innovations in resource mobilization
for development are taking shape.
Yet in spite
of this optimistic outlook, the international community faces a
much more demanding agenda in advancing the MDGs as 2015 draws nearer.
Despite progress, nearly 1 billion people remain in extreme poverty.
All regions are off track to meet the target for reducing child
mortality; nutrition is a major challenge, with one-third of all
children in developing countries underweight or stunted; half the
people in developing countries lack access to improved sanitation.
Action to scale
up development efforts needs to accelerate, but steps forward still
appear tentative. Nearly seven years after the Millennium Summit
and five years after the Monterrey summit, there has yet to be a
country case where aid is being significantly scaled up to support
a medium-term program to reach the MDGs. While there has been modest
progress in Paris or Brussels or London to address the well-recognized
problems in designing and delivering international aid-proliferation
of aid channels, weak coordination, lack of resource predictability,
misalignment with country strategies, and so on-viewed from the
capitals of Ethiopia, Madagascar, or Bolivia, this progress appears
to be slow.
This Global
Monitoring Report (GMR) highlights two areas that require greater
international attention if higher global growth trends are to translate
into sustainable development outcomes and if the gains are to be
shared more evenly:
Gender
equality
The first of
these arises from gender inequality and lost opportunities for all
people to help generate and participate in the gains from economic
growth. The choice to focus the 2007 report on the third MDG-the
promotion of gender equality and empowerment of women-reflects a
recognition by the international community that more is needed to
support equality for the half of humanity disadvantaged through
less access than men to rights (equality under the law), to resources
(equality of opportunity), and to voice (political equality).
Fragile
states
The second risk
arises from the especially difficult development challenges and
greater needs facing fragile states. Fragile states-countries with
particularly weak governance, institutions, and capacity-comprise
9 percent of the developing world's population but over one-fourth
of the extreme poor. They represent an enormous challenge: how can
the international community provide resources to support efficient
service delivery, postconflict recovery, and reform? Without addressing
these development challenges the fragile states pose risks that
can cross borders-through civil conflicts, risks to public health,
and humanitarian crises.
Two additional
risks pertain to environmental sustainability and securing the gains
from trade liberalization. Natural resource depletion and environmental
degradation pose risks to both the quality of growth, and the potential
for sustaining future growth. Growth based on the depletion of natural
wealth, rather than through increasing wealth for current and future
generations, is unsustainable. The "adjusted net savings rate"
measures national savings after accounting for resource depletion
and damage to the environment, raising broad policy questions about
environmental policies that are beyond the scope of this report
but may be tackled in future GMRs.
Risks from failure
to advance multilateral trade liberalization and expand market access
are also highlighted in this year's report. The Doha Round of trade
negotiations was effectively suspended in July 2006, but early in
2007 there was an informal agreement to resume talks. Failure to
make progress means depriving many countries of vital opportunities
for accelerating their growth through trade.
To address these
risks and advance the MDG agenda there is a pressing need for better
aid coordination to strengthen aid quality and scale-up assistance.
This requires efforts by all parties-donors, international financial
institutions (IFIs), and developing countries. Agreement needs to
be forged at the global level on practical mechanisms and instruments
to scale up aid and on measures to reduce the costs of aid fragmentation.
Progress with scaling-up will require more and better aid resources
(donors); sound, sequenced development strategies (developing partners);
better technical support for strong strategies (the IFIs); and a
more coherent "aid architecture" to reduce the costs of
fragmentation.
Download
report overview
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|