DEV/2519
     10 June 2005

Millennium Development Goals Status Report Issued, As Poverty Takes Centre Stage in Global Negotiations

UN Sees Gains on Poverty Worldwide, But Huge Gaps Remain in Meeting Vital Human Needs

NEW YORK, 9 June (UN Headquarters) -- A United Nations report out today profiles a world that has achieved unprecedented gains against poverty in Asia, but also one where mothers and children in many parts of the world are dying from causes which are treatable and preventable, and where half of the developing world lacks access to simple sanitation.

At a moment when poverty and the possibility of its eradication has returned to near the top of the world’s agenda, the assessment of progress on the Millennium Development Goals feeds into ongoing talks at the United Nations on international action for development, security and human rights, and into preparations for the Africa-oriented Group of 8 meeting in Gleneagles, Scotland.

“The year 2005 is crucial in our work to achieve the Goals”, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan says in his foreword to the report. “Instead of setting targets, this time world leaders must decide how to achieve them.”

Five years after adoption of the Millennium Declaration, where the Millennium Goals were first enunciated, and a decade before most of the goals and targets come due, the UN General Assembly will review progress on all areas of the Millennium Declaration at a summit to be held in September.

The number of people living in extreme poverty has fallen off by 130 million worldwide since 1990, according to The Millennium Development Goals Report 2005, even with overall population growth of more than 800 million in the developing regions since then.

This reduction of humanity’s ancient enemy, on an order of magnitude dwarfing that of any other period in history, was led by countries of Eastern, South-Eastern and Southern Asia, where extreme poverty was cut back by more than 230 million since 1990, with the Latin American–Caribbean region also contributing.

But these improvements were offset by increases in the number of the extreme poor in other areas, notably sub-Saharan Africa, from 227 million in 1990 to 313 million in 2001. In all, an estimated 1 billion people -- one in five people in the developing world -- still live below the extreme poverty line of a dollar a day in income (1993 U.S. dollars). For the very poor in sub-Saharan Africa, the average income actually fell, from 62 cents a day in 1990 to 60 cents in 2001.

Still, the decline of the extreme poor, from 28 per cent of the developing world population in 1990 to 21 per cent in 2001, means that the target of cutting the proportion of the very poor by half is expected to be met globally before the target year 2015, if post-1990 trends persist.

Deaths of Mothers and Children

The United Nations finds that progress in reducing mortality rates of children and mothers is unacceptable by any reasonable standard.

While rapid strides were made from 1960 to 1990 in keeping children in developing countries alive past their fifth birthday, improvement has slowed since, placing in jeopardy possibilities for reaching the target of further reducing the under-five mortality rate by two thirds by 2015. Vaccinations and a range of other low-cost prevention and treatment measures could save millions of young lives a year.

Data indicate that fewer women are dying during childbirth in many developing countries, but maternal mortality rates are among those for which it is most difficult to obtain accurate statistics. In developing countries, the rate is about 450 maternal deaths out of 100,000 births, while in the developed world it is 14. In countries where women have many children, most women face this risk many times. Over a lifetime, a woman in a developing country is 63 times more likely to die due to childbirth than one in the developed countries. The presence of a skilled attendant substantially improves the chances of survival; only 57 per cent of births were so attended in 2003, although up from 41 per cent in 1990.

Another under-addressed concern is that half of the developing world lacks access to improved sanitation. Vulnerability to disease is not the only result. Girls are dropping out of school, for instance, due to lack of access to sanitary facilities. Slow improvement regarding sanitation is in contrast to much better results in improving access to clean water.

2005 Year of Decision

Twenty-five United Nations agencies and global organizations collaborated to compile the most comprehensive and up-to-date statistics on targets and indicators associated with the Millennium Development Goals, covering income poverty, health, education and gender equality; environmental sustainability and slums; and trade, aid and debt.

The considerable progress recorded in numerous areas of human welfare since the UN global development conferences of the 1990s can be taken as an indication that revamped policies at the national level, along with international cooperation and development assistance, can produce results. The fact that life-or-death needs are still going unmet is an indication of the extent of missed opportunities and the price of insufficient commitment.

Agreement on the means to reach the Millennium Development Goal targets, including via trade, aid and debt relief, is now being negotiated among United Nations Member States in preparation for the 2005 World Summit in September. Their talks respond to the proposals of the Secretary-General regarding the linked challenges of development, security and human rights, as outlined in his 2005 report, In Larger Freedom (http://www.un.org/largerfreedom/). The Secretary-General’s report, in turn, draws in part on Investing in development, the 2005 publication of the Millennium Project, which outlines the means needed to achieve the Millennium Development Goals.

Progress on the Millennium Goals, especially in Africa, tops the agenda of the Group of 8 meeting to be hosted in July by the United Kingdom. Urgency regarding fulfilment of the Goals was cited as the major rationale for the pledge made three weeks ago by 15 European Union countries to reach the United Nations target of 0.7 per cent of national income devoted to aid by 2015.

The Millennium Development Goals Report will also provide input to the 27-28 June high-level dialogue in the UN General Assembly, on financing for development and follow-up on the 2002 Monterrey Consensus.

The UN funds, programmes and agencies and the international organizations that contributed to the 2005 Report are:

International Labour Organization

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization

World Health Organization

World Bank

International Monetary Fund

International Telecommunication Union

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

United Nations Development Programme

United Nations Environment Programme

Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

United Nations Children’s Fund

United Nations Development Fund for Women

United Nations Population Fund

United Nations Human Settlements Programme

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS

World Trade Organization

Economic Commission for Africa

Economic Commission for Europe

Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean

Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific

Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

Inter-Parliamentary Union

Coordinated by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs

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