1 / 30

Understanding the MDGs: Fundamentals to Development Part III

Understanding the MDGs: Fundamentals to Development Part III. Engineers Without Borders Vancouver. The numbers. 1.2 billion people live on less than $1/day 1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water - UNDP One child dies every 5 seconds from hunger Source, WFP

judd
Download Presentation

Understanding the MDGs: Fundamentals to Development Part III

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding the MDGs: Fundamentals to Development Part III Engineers Without Borders Vancouver

  2. The numbers • 1.2 billion people live on less than $1/day • 1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water - UNDP • One child dies every 5 seconds from hunger Source, WFP • 800 million people go to bed hunger every night • 6 million people die from TB, Malaria per year Source, WFP

  3. Overview • Human Development? • The MDGs, • Exploring Poverty • Why the focus on Africa? • What will it cost? • Concrete steps to action

  4. What does development mean to you?

  5. Human development… is about enlarging the choices people have to lead lives they value. – UN Human Development Report

  6. A Brief History of MDGs • 0.7% commitment: • Bruntland Report • Agenda 21, Rio Summit • 2000, UN Millennium Declaration • 189 world leaders committed to UN MDG • 8 Goals, 18 targets for 2015 • International community in agreement and targets set • Doha Declaration (2001) • Monterey Consensus (2002) • UN World summit 2005

  7. UN Millennium Development Goals Goal 1: Eradicate Extreme Poverty and Hunger Goal 2: Achieve Universal Primary Education Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women Goal 4: Reduce child mortality Goal 5: Improve Maternal Health Goal 6: Combat HIV/Aids, Malaria and other diseases Goal 7: Ensure Environmental Sustainability Goal 8: Develop Global partnership for development

  8. 8 goals; targets for 2015 1. ½,the number of people living in extreme poverty and hunger (1990-2015) 2. : all children access to primary education 3: Eliminate gender disparity in primary/secondary education 2015 4: reduce by 2/3 under 5 mortality rate 5.Reduce by ¾ maternity mortality ratio 6. Halt and reverse spread of HIV/Aids 7. Halt and reverse spread of malaria & other diseases 8. Integrate principles of SD in country policies/programs, reverse loss of environmental resources

  9. 18 Targets, 2015 9. ½ the number of people without access to safe drinking water/sanitation 10. Achieve sig. improvement in min. 1M slum dwellers ** Partnership for Development

  10. Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Target 1: Reduce by ½, the number of people living in extreme poverty Target 2: Reduce by ½, the number of people suffering from hunger

  11. What is Poverty?

  12. Poverty • Vulnerability • Limited access to basic needs • Important to distinguish between: Extreme, Moderate and Relative Poverty

  13. Extreme, Moderate and Relative Poverty Extreme Poverty: • Cannot meet basic human needs (nutrition, health care, shelter, education, water and sanitation • $1/day (WB) , 1.1b; 1/6 of pop • Developing Countries Moderate Poverty: • Basic needs are met, but barely • $1-$2/day, 1.5b Relative Poverty: • Lack access to cultural goods, quality services • Household income < national average

  14. Overcoming Poverty • Saving: • Trade- commercial farming • Technology **- irrigation methods, HYV of maise • Increased resources – more fertile soils These can Increase income

  15. So what happens when… • Lack of savings: • No Trade: • Decreased technology** • Decrease in Natural Resources • Sudden shocks • Population Growth What could cause the above situations?

  16. Poverty trap Market Resource input Impoverished household Agricultural output For survival

  17. Why is Sub-saharan Africa falling behind?

  18. Map of World Hunger

  19. Governance?

  20. Other causes • Geography: landlocked countries, majority of pop lives in the interior. • Lack of access to markets/limited transportation • Lack of Irrigation ( 90% of crops are rain fed, • Depletion of soil nutrients • Lack of health services: Higher transmissions of malaria • Aids • Existing poverty • Deep poverty trap Sources: The end of Poverty, J.Sachs

  21. How can EWB help break this Poverty trap? Market Resource input Impoverished household Agricultural output For survival

  22. Other methods?

  23. What would it cost? Consider: $1.08 / day to access basic human needs (WB est.) $0.77 average income/ poor household Income gap: $0.31/day 1.1 b ppl < $1/day Global income gap: $124b Now consider: $20.2trillion: Income of 22 donor countries 0.6% would meet the $124 income gap 0.7% of GDP would meet the income gap * This would not have been possible twenty years ago….WHY?

  24. ODA and MDGs 2006: $121b 2010: $143b 2015: $189b Increase in ODA required, beyond commitments: 2006: $48b 2010: $50b 2015: $74

  25. Forms of Capital • Human – health, education, nutrition • Business – equipment, machinery, tools • Infrastructure: roads, power, wat/san • Natural Capital: land, healthy soils, biodiversity • Public institution capital: government systems, judicial systems • Knowledge- scientific/technology

  26. Focus • Increasing Agric inputs • Investing in education • Investing in health • Developing power, transportation and communications services • Water and sanitation

  27. Use your voice • Make Poverty History • Food Aid – untied 40% • Debt relief • 0.7% Commitment

  28. Learn • www.wfp.org • www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ • www.ewb.ca – lunch and learns • www.makepovertyhistory.org Connect - people to people, actions to impact • Tell 3 people about the MDGs. • Invite EWB into your workplace Contribute • To organisations that support long term programming

More Related