Pakistan's performance on most MGDs unsatisfactory
LAHORE (October 24 2006): The Asia and Pacific region as a whole is on track to achieve most of the millennium development goals (MDGs), but progress in many individual countries, including Pakistan, is slow and performance on some vital targets is unsatisfactory, according to a new report titled 'Millennium Development Goals: Progress in Asia and the Pacific 2006'.
The report is produced through a regional partnership between Asian Development Bank (ADB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
It says that regional targets, such as halving poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and eliminating gender disparity in education, are on track or have already been achieved. And, progress on these is impressive compared to sub-Saharan Africa and even Latin America.
The report pointed out that two-thirds of Asians, or a total of 1.5 billion people, are still without access to basic sanitation. The region is also home to roughly three times as many underweight children and people living on less than $1 a day. The region is not progressing fast enough to meet some important targets, including infant mortality and access to basic sanitation in urban areas. Meanwhile, HIV prevalence is actually on the rise and the proportion of people with access to improved water sources is declining.
The regional scorecards presented in the report mask some drastically uneven progress across countries. Many of the developing countries of a region that stretch from the Pacific to Central Asia are likely to miss or even regress from a wide range of MDGs, including the targets on child health, and diseases, such as HIV and TB.
The countries of most concern are identified in the report by combining a measurement of their current level of deprivation against progress on the MDGs. Using this, they are grouped into the following four categories.
MOVING AHEAD: Making good progress and with a latest status better than average for the region, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, People's Republic of China (PRC), Kyrgyz Republic, Malaysia, Palau, Thailand, and Vietnam.
LOSING MOMENTUM: Would have to accelerate progress to be able to meet targets, although from a relatively favourable latest status, including Fiji Islands, Kazakhstan, Samoa, and Uzbekistan.
CATCHING UP: Making progress but their latest status is below the region's average, Afghanistan, India and Nepal.
FALLING FURTHER BEHIND: Causing greatest concern because they score negatively on both progress and latest status indexes. These countries include Bangladesh, Indonesia, Laos People's Democratic Republic, Mongolia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, and Philippines.
The report avers that there is also a wide divide between progress seen in urban and rural areas. Of the 2 billion rural dwellers world-wide without access to basic sanitation, 1.5 billion were in Asia and the Pacific in 2004. Yet in that year, only one-third of all Asians living in rural areas had access to basic sanitation compared to 74 percent of urban residents. "Much remains to be done if governments in the region are serious about delivering the MDG promises to their poor and to achieve sustainable development," the report adds.
It says that at present, too many countries that score low on the progress or status of the education and health targets commit only a small proportion of their GDP to these sectors. And, countries of most concern in the region are often among those not receiving enough from trade or aid.
The report concludes that while developing countries must commit to supporting institutions and policies that promote the sustainable economic growth required to achieve the MDGs, developed countries must also deliver on providing more and more efficient aid and ensure fair trade and a more equitable share of global prosperity for poor people.
LAHORE (October 24 2006): The Asia and Pacific region as a whole is on track to achieve most of the millennium development goals (MDGs), but progress in many individual countries, including Pakistan, is slow and performance on some vital targets is unsatisfactory, according to a new report titled 'Millennium Development Goals: Progress in Asia and the Pacific 2006'.
The report is produced through a regional partnership between Asian Development Bank (ADB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
It says that regional targets, such as halving poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and eliminating gender disparity in education, are on track or have already been achieved. And, progress on these is impressive compared to sub-Saharan Africa and even Latin America.
The report pointed out that two-thirds of Asians, or a total of 1.5 billion people, are still without access to basic sanitation. The region is also home to roughly three times as many underweight children and people living on less than $1 a day. The region is not progressing fast enough to meet some important targets, including infant mortality and access to basic sanitation in urban areas. Meanwhile, HIV prevalence is actually on the rise and the proportion of people with access to improved water sources is declining.
The regional scorecards presented in the report mask some drastically uneven progress across countries. Many of the developing countries of a region that stretch from the Pacific to Central Asia are likely to miss or even regress from a wide range of MDGs, including the targets on child health, and diseases, such as HIV and TB.
The countries of most concern are identified in the report by combining a measurement of their current level of deprivation against progress on the MDGs. Using this, they are grouped into the following four categories.
MOVING AHEAD: Making good progress and with a latest status better than average for the region, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, People's Republic of China (PRC), Kyrgyz Republic, Malaysia, Palau, Thailand, and Vietnam.
LOSING MOMENTUM: Would have to accelerate progress to be able to meet targets, although from a relatively favourable latest status, including Fiji Islands, Kazakhstan, Samoa, and Uzbekistan.
CATCHING UP: Making progress but their latest status is below the region's average, Afghanistan, India and Nepal.
FALLING FURTHER BEHIND: Causing greatest concern because they score negatively on both progress and latest status indexes. These countries include Bangladesh, Indonesia, Laos People's Democratic Republic, Mongolia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, and Philippines.
The report avers that there is also a wide divide between progress seen in urban and rural areas. Of the 2 billion rural dwellers world-wide without access to basic sanitation, 1.5 billion were in Asia and the Pacific in 2004. Yet in that year, only one-third of all Asians living in rural areas had access to basic sanitation compared to 74 percent of urban residents. "Much remains to be done if governments in the region are serious about delivering the MDG promises to their poor and to achieve sustainable development," the report adds.
It says that at present, too many countries that score low on the progress or status of the education and health targets commit only a small proportion of their GDP to these sectors. And, countries of most concern in the region are often among those not receiving enough from trade or aid.
The report concludes that while developing countries must commit to supporting institutions and policies that promote the sustainable economic growth required to achieve the MDGs, developed countries must also deliver on providing more and more efficient aid and ensure fair trade and a more equitable share of global prosperity for poor people.