Shaukat for finding ways to eradicate poverty
HALIFAX (November 13 2006): Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on Sunday urged the world community to fulfil its obligations and work together with utmost sincerity and commitment to find ways and means through creating employment and income generating opportunities for the poor segments of society to eradicate poverty.
Delivering keynote address at the Global Micro-Credit Summit here, he that said poverty "is the gravest challenge" facing humanity at present, and "poverty and social deprivation lie at the root of extremism". He proposed a five-point holistic and inclusive strategy for promotion and spreading micro-credit in countries with high poverty levels.
The Prime Minister called for fighting poverty from a common platform by pooling energy and resources of the international community to rid the world of poverty, hunger, disease and deprivation.
He said that governments in developing countries must demonstrate a strong political commitment towards supporting microfinance, coupled with imparting technical and vocational skills to the poor for sustainable income generation, involvement of multiple actors and institutions to ensure microfinance outreach to the target groups, secure commitments at the global level to ensure macro economic and regulatory frameworks to support the growth of microfinance and mainstreaming of the microfinance into the financial sector as a commercially viable proposition.
He said that extremism breeds a festering sense of injustice and denial of economic opportunity, and multiple interventions are required to cause a dent into poverty.
He said there was need for a lasting and sustainable poverty reduction strategy and it must focus on creating income-generating avenues for the poor and the disenfranchised, particularly the women. He said that Pakistan has successfully implemented a stabilisation programme and wide ranging structural reforms, which have put the economy back on the track of sustainable growth and poverty alleviation.
"Pakistan's poverty reduction strategy has brought down the number of people below the poverty line from 34.5 percent in 2001 to 23.9 percent in 2005," he said.
He referred to 'Fiscal Responsibility Law' and said that it has been promulgated to ensure fiscal discipline and to obviate future policy slippages.
The Prime Minister said that Pakistan has implemented a Poverty Reduction Strategy, built on four pillars of accelerating growth, investment in human development, promoting self-employment through microfinance and social safety nets for the most vulnerable groups.
Shaukat Aziz said Pakistan government has also established strong foundations of micro-finance in the formal sector, along with extending support to civil society institutions.
Khushhali Bank was set up as the first specialised microfinance institution and a law was promulgated to provide separate regulatory framework for micro-credit institutions, he said.
He said that four specialised microfinance banks have been established at district level in Pakistan. He also referred to a variety of institutional models to increase micro-credit coverage to the poor, including the Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund, rural support programmes and credit lines for microfinance by commercial banks and leasing companies.
He said that Pakistan is combining micro-credit with skill development and social mobilisation as a comprehensive strategy to enable the poor to make the best use of borrowed resources.
Appreciating the efforts of Nobel Laureate Professor Yunus in the field of micro-credit, he said he established a successful example in this regard by establishing successful model of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh.
The Prime Minister also appreciated the contribution made by the Micro-credit Summit Campaign since 1997. He also welcomed the objective of the Summit to officially launch the campaign's extension to 2015 by which time it is hoped to ensure that 175 million of the world's poorest families, especially women, would receive credit for self-employment as well as 100 million of the world's poorest families would move from below one dollar a day to above one dollar a day, adjusted for purchasing power parity.
He said that serious challenges, in terms of widening inequality between rich and poor nations, are creating islands of opulence amid oceans of poverty.
He said that war, illiteracy, poverty, pandemics, social injustice and intolerance still haunt the world while poverty is the gravest challenge facing humanity at present.
He said the poor suffer from lack of income and assets; they have little or no access to basic human needs such as health and education; they are handicapped because of social exclusion and voicelessness.
Shaukat Aziz said there is need to improve the coverage and outreach of micro-credit to the majority of poor populations.
Referring to measures taken by Pakistan government to eradicate poverty, he said the government has implemented an ambitious and all-encompassing reform agenda, covering all aspects of national life; political, administrative, social and economic which has brought about a positive change in the country and the process of national renewal is well under way.
The Prime Minister said that political institutions have been reformed, women and minorities have been given greater representations, democratic norms and practices have been institutionalised, accountability and transparency are the order of the day.
"We have all the ingredients of a sustainable democracy--a vibrant opposition, a free media, an independent judiciary and, above all, an informed public opinion", he said.
The Prime Minister said that in the economic sector, Pakistan has successfully implemented a stabilisation programme and wide-ranging structural reforms, which have put the economy back on the track of sustainable growth and poverty alleviation.
He said Pakistan is now one of the fastest growing economies in the region and hopes to sustain a high growth trajectory of 6 to 8 percent. He said the government has adopted a variety of institutional models to increase the coverage and outreach of micro-credit to the poor.
He said the government is also encouraging the private sector to come forward, and the regulatory role of the central bank is that of a policy maker, enabler and facilitator and the policy framework promotes public-private partnerships and private sector initiatives.
The Prime Minister said these initiatives have led to positive outcomes as evidenced by substantial growth in the micro-finance sector in Pakistan over the last six years.
He termed the start of Greenfield micro-finance banks, entry of commercial banks, diversification of products, manifold increases in the number of borrowers and development of distribution network as conduits for income generation, particularly for women, landless farmers and workers without assets.
The government, he said, is combining micro-credit with skill development and social mobilisation as a comprehensive strategy to enable the poor to make the best use of borrowed resources.
Concluding his keynote address, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said, "We have to learn from each other, share our insights and experiences, and adopt the best practices."
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