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Millennium Development Goals A South Asian Perspective

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Title: Millennium Development Goals A South Asian Perspective


1
Millennium Development Goals A South Asian
Perspective
  • August 13, 2005
  • By Dr. Yasmeen Sabeeh Qazi
  • Senior Program Advisor
  • Packard Foundation

2
GENESIS SYNTHESIS
  • MDGs emerged as an agreed Development Agenda in
    September 2000 in UN sponsored Millennium Summit
  • 147 World leaders agreed to a global compact
    MDGs
  • Further supported by G8 countries in 2003
  • Considered as a quantifiable Development Agenda
    emerging from the series of conferences in 1990s
    on Development

3
ESSENCE
  • Eight Goals
  • Each goal - a specific commitment to reverse the
    spread of poverty and disease by 2015
  • Supported by an Action Plan with 18
    quantifiable targets combating
  • Poverty
  • Hunger
  • Disease
  • Illiteracy
  • Environmental Degradation
  • Discrimination against women

4
  • Goals assign clear responsibilities to rich
    countries to provide developing countries
  • More Aid
  • Fairer terms of trade
  • Meaningful Debt Relief
  • UNDP Human Development Report 2003 provides most
    comprehensive analysis to date of
  • Status of Global Campaign
  • Concrete Policy Reforms
  • Resource commitments needed to make these goals a
    reality by 2015

5
Challenges
  • More than a billion people still struggle to
    survive on less than a dollar a day
  • Most of them lack access to basic health services
    safe drinking water
  • Globally one child out of five does not complete
    primary school
  • In much of the developing world, the HIV/AIDS
    pandemic continues to spread unchecked
  • Nearly 800 million people or 15 of worlds
    population, suffer from chronic hunger

6
Challenges
  • If current trend continues, South Asia and
    Sub-Saharan Africa will not meet the target by
    2015
  • In Sub-Saharan Africa, a child has only a
    one-in-three chances of completing primary school
  • And one-in four school aged children in South
    Asia are not being educated
  • Half a million women die in pregnancy or
    childbirth each year ,or one every minute of a
    day
  • A woman in Sub-Saharan Africa is 100 times more
    likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth than is
    a women in Western Europe

7
South Asian Perspective
  • South Asia with GNI per capita at 460 is home to
    nearly 40 of worlds poor living on less than
    dollar a day
  • Since 1990, region has experienced rapid GDP
    growth, averaging 5.4 a year
  • This growth has helped to reduce the consumption
    poverty rate substantially
  • India has reduced poverty rate by 5 10 since
    1990
  • Only exception is Pakistan where poverty has
    stagnated at around 33 using national poverty
    lines
  • Challenges remain on measurement of consistent
    poverty trends has created a debate on
    measuring poverty trends in the 1990s

8
  • Encouraging success in reduction of mortality in
    children under five
  • Rates has reduced substantially between 1990 and
    2002 from 130 to 95 per 1000 live birth
  • Especially IMR is significantly reduced in
    Bangladesh from 144 to 73 per 1000 live births

9
  • MDG 1 Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
  • Target 1 Halve, between 1990 2015 the
    proportion of people whose income is less
    than one dollar a day

10
  • People living on less than 1 dollar a day in
    South Asia is 428 million (31.1) in 2001
    compared to 462 million (40.1) in 1990
  • People living on less than 2 dollar a day in
    South Asia is 1,059 million (76.9) compared to
    958 million (85.5) in 1990
  • Greatest number of poor people live in South
    Asia, but the proportion of poor is highest in
    Sub Saharan Africa, where slow economic growth
    has left millions at the margins of survival
  • If projected growth remains on track, global
    poverty rates will fall to 12.7 percent- less
    than half the 1990 level- and 363 million more
    people will avert extreme poverty
  • Source World Bank Data

11
MDG 1 Eradicate Extreme Poverty Hunger

  • Target 2 Halve between 1990 2015 the
    proportions of people who suffer from hunger
  • Malnutrition plays a role in more than half of
    all child deaths
  • Prevalence rates of underweight children have
    been falling in most regions, but too slowly to
    achieve 2015 targets
  • In many regions the number of hungry people
    continues to grow
  • In South Asia however, progress in the prevalence
    rates of underweight children have been fast, the
    malnutrition rates declining by 25
  • However the rates of malnutrition in general
    population remains high in South Asia

12
MDG 2 Achieve Universal Primary Education
  • Target 3 Ensure that, by 2015 children every
    where, boys and girls alike, will be able to
    complete a full course of primary schooling
  • According to World Bank study, only 37 of 155
    developing countries analyzed have achieved
    universal primary education
  • Based on 1990s trends, another 32 are likely to
    achieve that goal
  • But 70 countries risk not reaching the goal
    unless progress is accelerated
  • South Asia has chronically low enrollment
    completion rates and completion rates in Middle
    East and North Africa stagnated in 1990s

13
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14
  • Primary Completion rate average primary
    School only

15
MDG 3 Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
  • Target 4 Eliminate gender disparity in primary
    and secondary education, preferably by 2005, and
    to all levels of education no later than 2015
  • The differences between boys and girls schooling
    are greatest in regions with the lowest primary
    school completion rates and lowest average
    incomes
  • In South Asia girls enrollment in Primary schools
    is 12 points lower than boys
  • And only 61 of girls complete primary school
    compared with 86 of boys
  • Gender disparity at school is still serious in
    many Sub-Saharan African and South Asian countries

16
  • Beyond schooling the gender disparity in literacy
    is widespread, impinging on women empowerment
  • Gender disparity in labor market is observed
    throughout the world in different proportion
  • Of the 109 countries with data for late
    1990s,only 18 had a share of women equal or
    slightly higher than that of men
  • Over the last decade there has been only a small
    progress, globally, in gender equality in wage
    employment in the non agriculture sector

17
  • Ratio of girls to boys in primary and secondary
    education

18
MDG 4 Reduce Child Mortality
  • Target 5 Reduce by two thirds, between 1990
    and
  • 2015, the under five Mortality rate
  • Child mortality is closely linked to poverty
  • In 2002, the average under five mortality rates
    were
  • -121 deaths per 1000 live births in low-
    income countries
  • - 40 in lower middle income countries
  • - 22 in upper-middle-income countries
  • - 7 or less in high-income countries
  • In 2002 48 countries had child mortality rates
    greater than 100 and 15 countries have greater
    than 200
  • Mortality rates for children under 5 dropped by
    15 percent since 1990, but the rates remain high
    in developing countries

19
  • More than 10 million children die each year in
    the developing world, vast majority from
    preventable causes
  • In developing countries 1 child in 10 dies before
    its 5th birthday, compared with 1 in 143 in high
    income countries
  • At current rates of progress only a few countries
    will likely to achieve this MDG of reducing child
    mortality to one third of their 1990 levels
  • Just as child deaths are the result of many
    causes, reducing child mortality will require
    multiple, complimentary interventions

20
  • Under Five mortality rate

21
MDG 5 Improve Maternal Health
  • Target 6 Reduce by three quarters, between
    1990
  • and 2015, the maternal mortality ratio
  • Worldwide, more than 50 million women suffer from
    poor reproductive health and serious pregnancy
    related illnesses and disability
  • Every year more than 500,000 women die from
    complications of pregnancy and child birth.
  • Most of these deaths occur in Asia, but the risk
    of dying is highest in Africa
  • In developing countries, only about half of
    deliveries are attended by professional health
    staff
  • In South East Asia currently 35 births are
    attended by skilled attendants

22
The extreme risk of dying from pregnancy or child
birth in South East Asia is 1 in 140
  • Lifetime Risk of Maternal Death, 2000

23
MDG 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria and other diseases
  • Target 7 Have halted by 2015 begun to
    reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS
  • In 2003, 36 million adults and 2 million children
    were living with HIV/AIDS
  • 66 of these cases are in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Almost a million new cases in South East Asia ,
    where more than 7 million people are living with
    HIV/AIDS
  • HIV strikes at youth - women are particularly
    vulnerable
  • More than half of those newly infected with HIV
    are between 15 and 24 year old - 13 for males
    and 6 for females
  • East Asia have the lowest rates of known infected
    cases

24

Youths Living with HIV/AIDS

25
  • Target 7 Have halted by 2015 and begun to
    reverse
  • the incidence of malaria and other major
    diseases
  • WHO estimates that 300 500 million cases of
    Malaria occur every year, leading to 1.1 million
    deaths
  • 90 of all cases occur in Sub-Saharan Africa
    may account for as much as 25 of child mortality
  • Tuberculosis kills around 2 million people a
    year, most of them 15-45 years old
  • Each year there are about 3 million new cases in
    South East Asia

26
Incidence of Tuberculosis
27
MDG 7 Ensure Environmental Sustainability
  • Target 9 Integrate the principles of
    sustainable development into country policies and
    programmes reverse the losses of environmental
    resources
  • Forest cover 20 of land in South Asia and about
    30 of all land around the world
  • Forest shrank by 95 million hectares in the last
    decade, the minimum change is however in South
    Asia, Middle East North Africa

28
Total Energy Use
29
Carbon Dioxide Emissions
30
  • Target 10 Halve by 2015 the proportion of
    people without sustainable access to safe
    drinking water and basic sanitation
  • Access to safe water has improved in last decade
    but in 2000, 1.2 billion people still lacked
    access to an improved water source
  • Out of this, 40 are in East Asia Pacific and
    25 in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Meeting MDGs will require providing about 1.5
    billion people with access to safe water and 2
    billion with access to basic sanitation
    facilities between 2000 and 2015

31
Population with access to an improved water
source ()
32
  • Target 11 Have achieved by 2020 a significant
    improvement in the lives of at least 100 million
    slum dwellers
  • Slums are the stage to the most acute scenarios
    of urban poverty, physical environmental
    deprivation
  • Approx. one-third of the Urban Population
    globally live in these conditions
  • Where available, trend data indicate that this
    problem is worsening
  • In case of no major interventions it is expected
    that 924 million slum dwellers in 2001 will grow
    to 1.5 billion by 2020 UN-HABITAT

33
MDG 8 Build a Global Partnership for Development
  • Goal 8 complements the first 7 goals and has 7
    targets
  • (12-18)
  • It calls for an open, rule-based trading and
    financial system
  • More generous AID to countries committed to
    poverty reduction
  • Relief for debt problems of developing countries
  • It draws attention to problems of least developed
    land locked countries small island states
  • Calls for co-operation with private sector to
    address youth unemployment
  • Ensure access to affordable, essential drugs
  • Make available the benefits of new technologies
  • Monterrey Consensus In March 2002, leaders from
    developing and high income countries agreed on
    new strategies for attacking global poverty in
    Monterrey, Mexico
  • Commitment was made to increase official
    development assistance in real term by about 16
    billion a year by 2006

34
What will it take to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals?
  • Political will , commitment focus
  • Monitoring the process
  • Economies need to grow to provide jobs more
    income for poor people
  • Health Education system must deliver services
    to everyone, men women, rich poor
  • Infrastructure has to work and be accessible to
    all

35
  • Policies need to empower people to participate in
    the development process
  • Fortify partnerships with private sector to
    complement supplement government programs
  • Prioritization and context setting in development
    work at each country level
  • Overcoming financial, human and institutional
    resource constraints
  • Increased resources new financial commitments
    by the wealthiest nations
  • While sustained growth would be necessary for
    poverty reduction, concomitant improvement in
    institutional delivery mechanisms will be
    essential for achieving progress in all other
    dimensions of MDGs.

36
  • Thank You . . .
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