Millennium Development Goals

In 2005, $151 billion
would have put an end
to extreme poverty. In
the same year, the world spent $198 billion on
shoes alone.

In September 2000, leaders from around the world signed the Millennium Declaration, which promised to halve the proportion of people living in extreme poverty by 2015. They set out eight measurable targets for action – the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Ten years on, world leaders met to review the MDGs at the United Nations Millennium Development Goals summit in New York on September 20-22, 2010.

While leaders celebrated a big package of money for global health, they failed to acknowledge their collective failure to meet their aid targets. With five years to go, the world is far from achieving the MDGs. We need answers on how the money that’s been promised will be raised.

The goals

If leaders today invest enough to achieve the MDGs, the world in 2015 will be a very different place. Children everywhere will have access to clean water, adequate food and an education. More women will survive childbirth. Vulnerable communities will be able to cope with climate-related disasters and economic shocks. More people will have decent jobs and earn enough to feed their families.

There are eight Millennium Development Goals, each focusing on a vital area of human rights and poverty for 2015:

Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Achieve universal primary education Promote gender equality and empower women Reduce child mortality
Improve maternal health Combat HIV/AIDS and other diseases Ensure environmental sustainability Global partnership for development

1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger

2. Achieve universal primary education

3. Promote gender equality and empower women

4. Reduce child mortality

5. Improve maternal health

6. Combat HIV/AIDS and other diseases

7. Ensure environmental sustainability

8. Global partnership for development

Source: UN

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MDGs and the Pacific

With five years to go, sub-Saharan Africa and the Pacific are the two regions of the world falling most dangerously behind in progress toward achieving the MDGs.

In the Pacific, four million people live in poverty – that's almost half the total population. Nearly 18,000 children die every year, many from preventable causes.

 

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