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Issues and Challenges in Monitoring the MDGs Post 2015 Yongyi Min United Nations Statistics Division. United Nations Statistics Division. Outline. Issues in the current MDGs monitoring Challenges in monitoring the MDGs post 2015 Developing SMART post 2015 goals for monitoring.
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Issues and Challenges in Monitoring the MDGs Post 2015Yongyi MinUnited Nations Statistics Division United Nations Statistics Division
Outline • Issues in the current MDGs monitoring • Challenges in monitoring the MDGs post 2015 • Developing SMART post 2015 goals for monitoring
Issues in the current MDGs monitoring • 1. One-size-fit-all targets • 2. Measuring relative change vs. absolute change • 3. Baseline year: 1990 or 2000? • 4. Other issues
Issue 1: One-size-fit-all targets • The MDGs are evaluated by numerical targets, some specific (e.g. reduce extreme poverty by half, reduce under-five mortality by two thirds), some more vague (e.g. productive and decent employment, reduce biodiversity loss). • The targets were formulated based on historical trends at the global level. They are the projections to 2015 based on the global trends in the 60s, 70s and 80s. Therefore it might not be fair to impose them on each country or region.
Issue 2: Measuring relative change vs. absolute change • Performance on most of the MDGs are measured in relative terms, which puts countries with a poor starting point at a disadvantage. • Monitoring MDG progress should use both relative and absolute changes and should investigate the association between them to gain the maximum possible insight into the MDG progress.
Example 1: Reduce extreme poverty by half • Top 20 performers based on Relative Annual Progress Rate (RAPR), RAPR = [(Xlatest-Xfirst)/Xfirst] / (Tlatest-Tfirst)
Example 1: Reduce extreme poverty by half • Top 20 performers based on Absolute Annual Progress Rate (AAPR), AAPR = (Xlatest-Xfirst)/(Tlatest-Tfirst)
Example 2: Reduce Under-Five Child Mortality by two thirds • Top 20 performers based Relative Change (RC) over 1990-2010, RC= (X2010-X1990)/X1990
Example 2: Reduce Under-Five Child Mortality by two thirds • Top 20 performers based Absolute Change (AC) over 1990-2010, AC= X2010-X1990
Issue 3: Baseline year: 1990 or 2000? • The Millennium Declaration was adopted in September 2000 by the General Assembly and the MDG monitoring framework was established in 2001. • 1990 is normally used as the reference/benchmark year for MDG monitoring. This leads to a discrimination against countries with poor 1990s performance.
Issue 4. Some other issues in the current MDG monitoring • Data issues in the current MDG monitoring: data availability, discrepancies between national data sets and series compiled by international agencies, data inconsistencies within country, data comparability. • Lack of clear numerical targets for Goal 8 and its linkage with other MDGs. • MDGs monitoring focuses more on average progress at global, regional or national level, neglecting the poorest and most vulnerable.
Challenges in monitoring the MDGs post 2015 • Global vs. local targets • Simplicity vs. complexity, and stability vs. flexibility • Disaggregated monitoring • Linking with monitoring other development goals and initiatives: Rio+20, measuring well-being.
Developing SMART post 2015 goals for monitoring For better monitoring of development progress, SMART criteria can be used to develop the post 2015 MDGs • S: Simple • M: Measurable • A: Achievable • R: Relevant • T: Time-bound