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Development
and Poverty Reduction. Looking Back, Looking Ahead
James D.Wolfensohn,
President; François Bourguignon, Senior Vice President and
Chief Economist, The World Bank
Prepared for the 2004 Annual Meetings of the World Bank and IMF
October 2004
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Copyright ©2004
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World
Bank SKU 31858
Introduction
Development thinking and practice have evolved in ways that should
be conducive to more rapid development, but the promise has yet
to be fulfilled.Why? In part because of natural lags between thinking,
practice, and outcome. But also because countries of the developed
and developing worlds have not delivered fully on their commitments
in their North-South development partnership.
The pressure
to do better is growing. The global imbalances in the distribution
of income and wealth are huge, and the awareness of these imbalances
grows as information flows ever more quickly around the globe. People
everywhere can compare themselves to the richest developed societies,
and they are anxious to reduce the yawning gaps in income and consumption.
Failing to come
to grips with these imbalances is bound to produce mounting dissatisfaction.
But we face a window of opportunity, one that may not stay open.
The opportunity is to put into practice what we have learned about
increasing opportunity and reducing poverty, at a time when demographics,
economics, and even geopolitics should make that possible.Not doing
this will sow discouragement about development and progress in wealthy
and poor nations alike-creating barriers to future development efforts,
even feeding civil and international conflict.
What will it
take to move forward? There is a real opportunity for improving
the mechanisms of global governance, but this will take several
years. In the meantime, there are tasks to be tackled with some
urgency. In trade, developed countries must follow through on their
commitments at the Geneva talks-to give developing countries greater
market access. In aid, donor countries must scale up their assistance
in ways commensurate with the Millennium Development Goals, reinforcing
and accelerating the mild progress of the past two years. In governance,
developing countries must continue to move toward greater accountability,
transparency, and efficiency. And all countries need to work together
to address such disasters as HIV/AIDS and climate change.
This paper provides
the background for a call to action.
- Part 1 reviews
the changes in development thinking and development practice over
the past decade.
- Part 2 shows
that development progress has been mixed-with fairly impressive
global aggregates, with rapid poverty reduction and continued
advances in social indicators, but with highly uneven distributions
of those gains. And despite some progress on policy environments
and aid flows, both developing and developed countries have failed
to deliver fully on the commitments to extend these gains.
- Part 3 looks
at the worlds of 2015 and 2030 and maps out a course for action
in the next decade.
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