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NAMUNC IV
SOCHUM
Background Guide: Poverty
Overview
Over the years, we have been
inundated with the statistics and the images of poverty around the world -- so
much so that many people in both the North and South have come to accept it as
an unfortunate but unalterable state of affairs. The truth, however, is
the situation has changed in recent years, as the world today is more prosperous
than it ever has been. The technological advances we have seen in recent
years have created encouraging new opportunities to improve economies and reduce
hunger.
The extent and depth of poverty in the developing world is
a disgrace. Over 1.1 billion people live in absolute poverty, with only a
dollar a day or less per person to meet food, shelter, and other needs.
Not surprisingly, hunger, malnutrition, and associated diseases are widespread:
more than 700 million people do not have access to sufficient food to lead
healthy, productive lives. Millions more live on the edge of hunger; and
more than 180 million pre-school children are significantly underweight.
Unless concerted action is taken now, poverty is not expected to diminish much
in the near future. Most of the world’s poor are rural-based and, even
when they are not engaged in their own agricultural activities, they rely on
farm employment and income that depends in one way or another on agriculture.
Moreover, agricultural growth is a catalyst for broad- based economic growth and
development in most low- income countries. Agriculture's links to the
economy generate considerable employment, income, and growth in the rest of the
economy, as very few countries have experienced rapid economic growth without
agricultural growth either preceding or accompanying it. Economic growth
is strongly linked to poverty reduction. Diversification out of
agriculture will occur in the long term, but in the short term many countries
lack alternatives. As delegates and negotiators, it is your job to develop
this solution and discover alternative answers to this growing epidemic.
Below are some articles, facts, and websites that will help
you to develop your research for the conference. Good Luck!!
Goal 1 of
the Millennium Development
Goals (research these) sets out by the year 2015 to:
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reduce by half the proportion of people living on less than a dollar a
day; |
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reduce by half the proportion of people who suffer from hunger. |
In our world today:
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One third of deaths -- some 18 million
people a year or 50,000 per day -- are due to poverty-related causes.
That is 270 million people since 1990, the majority women and children,
roughly equal to the population of the US. |
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Every year more than 10 million children die of hunger and preventable
diseases - that's over 30,000 per day and one every 3 seconds. |
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Over one billion people live on less than $1 a day, and nearly half the
world's population (2.8 billion people) live on less than $2 a day.
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600 million children live in absolute poverty. |
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The three richest people in the world control more wealth than all 600
million people living in the world's poorest countries. (Source:
ChristianAid) |
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Income per person in the poorest countries in Africa has fallen by a
quarter in the last 20 years. (Source: ChristianAid) |
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800 million people go to bed hungry every day. (Source: FAO)
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Every year nearly 11 million children die before their fifth birthday.
(Source: UNICEF). |
Europe's
Governments are Failing their Global Poverty Commitments (From the Spring
Edition of Europe’s World.)
February 2006 - Many
Western governments, including EU ones, are allowing the UN Millennium
Development Goals to slip. Former Dutch development minister Eveline
Herfkens, who is the UN Coordinator of the Millennium Development
Goals campaign, says it's not too late to get the global poverty eradication
effort back on track, but the process needs a strong dose of political will.
We
are at a critical juncture in the fight against global poverty; less than 10
years away from the deadline set in September 2000 by 189 world leaders to
eliminate poverty and improve the lives of the world’s poorest. The
world’s heads of government committed themselves at the United Nations to
fighting poverty, hunger, gender inequality, environmental degradation and
HIV/AIDS, and to improving access to education, health care and clean water,
all by 2015.
These commitments -- known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) -- are
still technically and financially within our reach, but only if concrete
action is taken to implement them. This in turn will only be possible
if leaders -- including those in the European Union -- exercise the
political will to live up to their promises.
There are two particular areas in which tough decisions are needed to bring
about policy change. These changes require political will, while they
could significantly increase the likelihood of meeting the MDGs.
First, the EU must reform its trade and agricultural policies, which
impoverish and undermine markets and food security in poor countries.
Second, European countries need to live up to their commitments to increase
aid, and must ensure that this aid actually helps poor countries to achieve
the MDGs.
It
must be clearly understood that while the EU and other rich countries have
an important responsibility for creating the conditions that would allow
poor countries to meet the goals, the primary responsibility for the MDGs
lies with developing countries' leaders. It is they who must implement
the policies needed to meet the goals, and they have to reinforce these
efforts by improving governance, transparency and accountability.
Even before the Hong Kong ministerial meeting of the World Trade
Organization (WTO), called to determine the outcome of the current Doha
Round of trade negotiations, I was skeptical about the likelihood of its
delivering the necessary changes in EU trade and agricultural policies.
My skepticism was borne from experience. For many years, the EU has
promised improved “coherence” between its development objectives and its
trade and agriculture policies. Coherence has in fact been a treaty
commitment since the Maastricht treaty of 1991, yet nothing has happened.
Remedying the problems created by European trade and agricultural policies
would require a host of measures. To start with, the EU should finally
set a date for the complete elimination of export subsidies in agriculture.
Moving on, it should cut its trade-distorting domestic subsidies in
agriculture, starting with product-specific caps and leading to their
elimination in the medium-term. The EU should also open its
agricultural markets to developing country exporters by cutting tariffs on
agricultural products. Substantial cuts in tariff ceilings are needed
because actual applied tariffs are often much lower than the presently
allowed ceilings (meaning that anything but sharp cuts in ceilings could
leave applied tariffs the same).
Moreover, the EU wants to exclude an ample percentage of agricultural
products arguing that they are “sensitive” goods. The World Bank
estimates that exempting even 2% would wipe out three quarters of the
potential benefits of the Doha Round.
Going further, the EU also needs to open up its non-agricultural markets to
all low-income countries and to make this market access effective. At
present, even under the “Everything but Arms” initiative -- where
least-developed countries can export everything but arms, sugar, rice and
bananas -- exports are hampered by complicated and rigid rules of origin and
non-tariff barriers.
The
EU needs to open its markets to developing country exports, and it should do
this without asking for commitments in return from poor countries.
Pascal Lamy, when EU Trade Commissioner from 1999-2004, promised African and
other least developed countries a round of trade opening at the WTO “for
free.” This has not materialized, and instead the EU is making
aggressive demands in services and manufacturing.
Aid
alone will not, of course, be enough to achieve the Mugs. But more aid
would certainly help developing countries in their efforts to achieve the
goals. Improvements in governance in sub-Saharan Africa have led even
“hard-nosed” World Bank economists to conclude that they could easily put
more aid to good use. Moreover there are several important global
initiatives, such as the Fast-Track Initiative for education, that remain
seriously under-funded.
Even with the present European commitments, very little additional money
will become available for poor countries to achieve the Mugs. If
existing commitments are implemented, total official development assistance
(ODA) will increase from $78.7bn in 2004 to $97bn in 2006. But as debt
relief counts as ODA, this increase is likely to be largely wiped out by the
$15bn in debt forgiveness earmarked for Iraq this year and last.
By
setting a deadline of 2015 for collectively achieving the ODA target of 0.7%
of gross national income (GNI), the EU is now leading the pack on aid
volume. Yet 2015, and even 2010, when the interim target of 0.56% must
be met, are still far off and could easily be ignored by donor governments.
One way of getting round this problem would be for individual countries to
draw up credible schedules with annual implementation targets. Some
countries have already done this, but others including Austria, Germany and
Italy, have not. In Barcelona in 2002, these same countries committed to
increase aid to a minimum of 0.33% of GNI by 2006. It remains to be
seen whether they will meet this target, and indeed whether they will inject
fresh resources, or whether they will just use one off debt relief packages
to do so.
Increasing the volume of aid is only half the battle. I agree with the
Africa Commission that without improvements in aid delivery there is little
point in increasing aid, but the first battle must be to ensure that aid
goes to those countries most in need of funding to meet the MDGs. For
too long, donors have used development aid to pursue geo-political
objectives, with far too much aid going to middle-income countries.
EU
countries and the European Commission must better coordinate their aid and
harmonize their aid practices. The EU donor atlas shows how multiple
European donor entities each spread their budgets thinly over many sectors
in many countries – and demonstrates that this is simply not an efficient
use of resources as it reduces the value and impact of European aid.
It also imposes a crippling burden of administrative and other costs on
recipient countries, undermining their own institutional capacities. Instead
of developing and implementing their own policies, government officials
spend valuable time preparing separate reports for each donor, and
accommodating their different procedures and reporting requirements.
Instead of being accountable to their own people, they find themselves
entertaining hundreds of different donor missions every year.
Achieving the MDGs is a challenge that will certainly require steely
determination and large amounts of political will by all leaders across the
world, including those in the European Union. But the MDGs are
achievable. We are, after all, the first generation to have the knowledge,
technology and resources to eliminate poverty and to create a better world
for future populations. In 2000, we have also achieved political
consensus at the highest political level on the priorities and on the
division of responsibilities.
We cannot afford to miss the opportunity this gives us
to eradicate global poverty simply because we lack the political will.
Poverty and Fisheries (From the
REPORT of the THIRD SESSION OF THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON FISHERIES RESEARCH
Rome, 5-8 December 2000; FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED
NATIONS)
Combating poverty is high
on the agenda of governments and the international community. The
World Bank's World Development Report 2000 proposes a framework of actions
to attack poverty built on three pillars:
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Promoting opportunity:
expanding economic opportunity for poor people by stimulating overall
growth and by building up the assets of poor people and increasing returns
on these assets through a combination of market and non-market actions.
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Facilitating
empowerment: making state institutions more accountable and responsive to
poor people, strengthening the participation of poor people in political
processes and local decision making and removing the social barriers that
result from distinctions of gender, ethnicity, race and social status.
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Enhancing security:
reducing poor people's vulnerability to ill health, economic shocks,
policy- induced dislocations, natural disasters and violence, as well as
helping them cope with adverse shocks when they occur.
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All three pillars appear
to be relevant both in reducing poverty in fishing communities and also in
enhancing the contribution of the fisheries sector to overall poverty
reduction.
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In the fisheries sector
there are currently many programs addressing poverty by seeking to improve
fisheries management in coastal and inland fisheries, develop rural and
coastal aquaculture, improve safety at sea in small- scale fisheries, and
others.
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Several developing
countries have instituted special programs of assistance to coastal and
inland fishing communities that encompass subsidies for fishing implements,
soft loans, and various social welfare measures ranging from improved health
services to better educational facilities and the provision of drinking
water. Some fisheries development programs such as the Bay of Bengal Program
and ALCOM have given special attention to gender issues.
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In a number of developing
countries, small- scale fishers and fish-workers have become better
organized through the formation of unions and associations during the last
two to three decades. The emergence and strengthening of several of these
organizations have benefited from the activities of the International
Collective in Support of Fish-workers (ICSF 1984). These organizations have
been instrumental in defending the interests of their members (for example
regarding the extent of foreign fishing activities in the EEZs of their
countries).
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It is
generally acknowledged that fishers and fishing communities are highly
vulnerable to accidents, natural disasters and other shocks. Little is
known, however, about the extent to which poverty in fisheries is a
consequence of inadequate protection against such shocks and of deficient
mechanisms to cope with them once they occur. Such knowledge would be
important in deciding on the most effective actions and programs to reduce
vulnerability and improve coping mechanisms.
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Sources for Further
Research
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Databases
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News Sites
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Official Sites
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Think Tanks
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