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  • 标题:Setting the goals
  • 作者:Gupta, Sanjeev
  • 期刊名称:Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. The OECD Observer
  • 出版年度:2000
  • 卷号:Oct 2000
  • 出版社:OECD

Setting the goals

Gupta, Sanjeev

The goals for international development address that most compelling of human desires - a world free of poverty and free of the misery that poverty breeds. The goals have been set in quantitative terms, so part of the story is told in words and pictures, but the core of it is in numbers and charts.

The goals come from the agreements and resolutions of the world conferences organised by the United Nations in the first half of the 1990s. These conferences provided an opportunity for the international community to agree on steps needed to reduce poverty and achieve sustainable development.

Each of the seven goals addresses an aspect of poverty. They should be viewed together (not in steps) because they are mutually reinforcing. Higher school enrolments, especially for girls, reduce poverty and mortality. Better basic health care increases enrolment and reduces poverty. Many poor people earn their living from the environment. So progress is needed on each of the seven goals.

The goals will not be easy to achieve, but progress in some countries and regions shows what can be done. China reduced the number of its people living in poverty from 360 million in 1990 to about 210 million in 1998. Mauritius cut its military budget and invested heavily in health and education. Today all Mauritians have access to sanitation, 98% to safe water, and 97% of births are attended by skilled health staff. And many Latin American countries moved much closer to gender equality in education.

The message: if some countries can make great progress towards reducing poverty in its many forms, others can as well. But conflict is reversing gains in social development in many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The spread of HIV/AIDS is impoverishing individuals, families and communities on all continents. And sustained economic growth - that vital component for long-run reductions in poverty - still eludes half the world's countries. For more than 30 of them, real per capita incomes have fallen over the past 35 years. And where there is growth, it needs to be spread more equally

So, the goals can be met. But it will take hard work. Success will require, above all, stronger voices for the poor, economic stability and growth that favours the poor, basic social services for all, open markets for trade and technology and enough resources for development, used well.

References

A Better World for All, 2000 http://www.paris2l.org/betterworld/ DAC: Shaping the 21st Century: the Contribution of Development Co-operation, May 1996 http://wwwoecd.org/dac/pdf/stc.pdf Aid targeting the Rio conventions, September 2000 http://www.org/dac/pdf/rio_e.pdf - f

SANJEEv GUPTA, FISCAL AFFAIRS DIVISION, IMF; BRIAN HAMMOND, DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION DIRECTORATE, OECD; AND ERIC SWANSON, DEVELOPMENT DATA GROUP, WORLD BANK.

Copyright Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Oct 2000
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved

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