Can
the world eliminate poverty?
Good words, little action,
won't solve crisis, experts note
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UNITED NATIONS (IPS)�The global campaign to
eradicate poverty is being derailed by rising debt burdens, declining
development aid, volatile commodity markets and proliferation of
military conflicts.
"The world does not lack good intentions to
eradicate poverty," said Harri Holkeri of Finland, president of the
189-member UN General Assembly. But the good intentions are not being
matched by deeds as the number of poor people keeps increasing, not
decreasing, he adds.
At the 1995 Social Summit in Copenhagen, a firm
commitment was made to halve the proportion of people living in poverty
by the year 2015.
This commitment was reiterated by the world�s major
industrial powers at the Group of Seven summit in Japan last July, and
also by more than 180 world leaders attending the Millennium Summit in
New York in September.
As the United Nations commemorated the International
Day for the Eradication of Poverty on Oct. 23, Secretary General Kofi
Annan points out that although the international target is an ambitious
goal, "it is neither utopian nor impossible.
"We have the knowledge and the means with which
to achieve it. What is missing is the will," he adds.
In the developed world, Mr. Annan said, that means
the will to provide meaningful debt relief, to remove protectionist
barriers against exports from the poorest countries, and to spend more
than just a negligible fraction of income on development assistance.
In many developing nations, it means the will to
fight corruption, to put an end to persistent conflicts, and to build a
platform of good governance, he notes.
Currently, there are about 1.2 billion people living
below the poverty line of less than $1 per day, and almost three billion
on less than $2 per day, according to World Bank figures.
The international target is to decrease the
proportion of people living in poverty by the year 2015.
Globally, the proportion of people living in poverty
declined from 29 percent in 1987 to 26 percent in 1998, although the
total number of poor remained almost unchanged at around 1.2 billion.
The reduction in the incidence of global poverty is
attributed primarily to progress made in East Asia, most notably in
China, although progress was somewhat reversed during the Asian economic
crisis in 1997-1998, and seems to have stalled in China.
The performance in three other regions�namely
Africa, Latin America and South Asia�shows only moderate or no decline
in the incidence of poverty, while the number of people living in
poverty in these regions has increased.
According to the "Global Poverty Report"
released by the World Bank last July, an additional 74 million people
joined the ranks of the poor in sub-Saharan Africa in 1998, reaching a
total of some 291 million.
In Latin America, the figure increased from 64 to 78
million. And in South Asia, a total of 522 million people live in
poverty. The fastest rise was in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
republics, where it increased from about seven million to 24 million in
1998.
"My main contention is that poverty reduction
begins at home. Considerable progress could be made on the basis of
existing resources, if there were more stability, less conflict, and a
better use of those resources, as well as the will to encourage people
to participate more actively in economic life," said Mr. Browne,
who also heads UNDP�s Social Development and Poverty Elimination
Division.
He described it as enfranchisement in the broadest
sense of the term��"not just voting, but true enabling
participation, especially of women."
On the domestic front, a reduction of military
expenditures would free resources for education, health, water and other
social services, he argued.
Easing the debt burden and providing more market
access to exports from poorer countries would also help, Mr. Browne
said, if the resources are put to productive use.
At the same time, he said, "more aid should be
used for the kinds of enablement which I have described, not necessarily
just for lots more small-scale anti-poverty projects which are often not
fully absorbed nor sustainable."
Meanwhile, the United Nations identified both
HIV/AIDS and unrestricted globalization as two other factors for the
rise in poverty. |