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A Filipino boy washes his face in murky waters in Manila. Inaction on the environment will accelerate global poverty, warns the UN. Photograph: Francis R Malasig/EPAAdd caption |
The number of people living in extreme poverty could increase by up to 3 billion by 2050 unless urgent action is taken to tackle environmental challenges, a major UN report warned on Thursday.
The 2013 Human Development Report hails better than expected progress on health, wealth and education in dozens of developing countries but says inaction on climate change, deforestation, and air and water pollution could end gains in the world's poorest countries and communities.
"Environmental
threats are among the most grave impediments to lifting human
development … The longer action is delayed, the higher the cost will
be," warns the report, which builds on the 2011 edition looking at sustainable development.
"Environmental
inaction, especially regarding climate change, has the potential to
halt or even reverse human development progress. The number of people in
extreme poverty could increase by up to 3 billion by 2050 unless
environmental disasters are averted by co-ordinated global action," said
the UN.
"Far more attention needs to be paid to the impact
human beings are having on the environment. Climate change is already
exacerbating chronic environmental threats, and ecosystem losses are
constraining livelihood opportunities, especially for poor people. A
clean and safe environment should be seen as a right, not a privilege."
The
British prime minister, David Cameron, and US president Barack Obama
have both made eradicating extreme poverty a key plank in their
respective development agendas.
The proportion of people
living under $1.25 a day is estimated to have fallen from 43% in 1990 to
22% in 2008, driven in part by significant progress in China. As a
result, the World Bank last year said
the millennium development goal to halve the proportion of people
living in extreme poverty by 2015 had been met ahead of schedule.
Thursday's
report says more than 40 countries have done better than previously
expected on the UN's human development index (HDI), which combines
measures of health, wealth and education, with gains accelerating over
the past decade. Introduced in 1990, the index aims to challenge gross
domestic product and other purely economic assessments of national
wellbeing. Norway and Australia are highest in this year's HDI, while
the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Niger are ranked lowest.
Some
of the largest countries – including Brazil, China, India, Indonesia,
South Africa and Turkey – have made the most rapid advances, it says,
but there has also been substantial progress in smaller economies, such
as Bangladesh, Chile, Ghana, Mauritius, Rwanda and Tunisia. This has
prompted significant rethinking on routes to progress, says the report:
"The south as a whole is driving global economic growth and societal
change for the first time in centuries."
The report points
to cash-transfer programmes in Brazil, India and Mexico as examples of
where developing countries have pioneered policies for advancing human
development, noting how these efforts have helped narrow income gaps and
improve the health and education prospects of poor communities. The
presence of proactive "developmental states", which seek to take
strategic advantage of world trade opportunities but also invest heavily
in health, education and other critical services, emerges as a key
trend.
The rise of China and India, which doubled their per
capita economic output in fewer than 20 years, has driven an epochal
"global rebalancing", argues the report, bringing about greater change
and lifting far more people out of poverty than the Industrial
Revolution that transformed Europe and North America in the 18th and
19th centuries. "The Industrial Revolution was a story of perhaps 100
million people, but this is a story about billions of people," said
Khalid Malik, lead author of the report.
The report
singles out "short-sighted austerity measures", inaction in the face of
stark social inequalities, and the lack of opportunities for citizen
participation as critical threats to progress – both in developing
countries and in European and North American industrial powers. "Social
policy is at least as important as economic policy," Malik told the
Guardian. "People think normally you're too poor to afford these things.
But our argument is you're too poor not to."
He said more
representative global institutions are needed to tackle shared global
challenges. China, with the world's second largest economy and biggest
foreign exchange reserves, has only a 3.3% share in the World Bank,
notes the report, less than France's 4.3%. Africa, with a billion people
in 54 nations, is under-represented in almost all international
institutions. "If institutions are not seen as legitimate, people don't
play, or don't play nice," Malik said.
Developing countries
now hold two-thirds of the world's $10.2 trillion in foreign exchange
reserves, including more than $3tn in China alone, and nearly
three-quarters of the $4.3tn in assets controlled by sovereign wealth
funds worldwide, notes the report, adding: "Even a small share of these
vast sums could have a swift measurable impact on global poverty and
human development."
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2013/mar/14/environmental-threats-extreme-poverty-un
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2013/mar/14/environmental-threats-extreme-poverty-un
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