Unfinished Business [electronic resource] : Mobilizing New Efforts to Achieve the 2015 Millenium Development Goals.
Material type: TextSeries: Other papers | World Bank e-LibraryPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2010Subject(s): Access to Health Services | Accounting | Adolescent Health | Capacity Building | Capital Flows | Carbon Dioxide | Child Health | Child Mortality | Childbirth | Climate Change | Communicable Diseases | Crime | Debt | Developing Countries | Development Policy | Disabilities | Disasters | Early Child and Children's Health | Early Childhood Development | Economic Opportunities | Education | Educational Attainment | Employment Opportunities | Fertility | Fertility Rates | Food Production | Food Security | Gender Issues | Greenhouse Gases | Gross National Income | Health Insurance | Health Monitoring & Evaluation | Health, Nutrition and Population | Hospitals | Human Capital | Hygiene | Immunizations | Income Inequality | Infant Mortality | Infrastructure Investment | Job Creation | Land Tenure | Low-Income Countries | Malaria | Maternal Health | Maternal Mortality | Migrant Workers | Millennium Development Goals | Morbidity | Mortality | Mortality Rate | Mosquito Nets | Natural Disasters | Natural Resources | Nurses | Nutrition | Official Development Assistance | Population Growth | Poverty Reduction | Productivity | Public Health | Remittances | Reproductive Health | Rule of Law | Rural Population | Rural Poverty Reduction | Sanitation | Secondary Education | Smallholders | Technical Assistance | Tuberculosis | Unemployment | Universal Primary Education | Urban Poverty | Urbanization | Vaccines | Violence | Waste | Water Pollution | Water Supply | WorkersOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: Backed by sound economic policies and until the global crisis, a buoyant global economy, many developing countries made significant movement toward achieving the 2015millennium Development Goals (MDGs), particularly those for poverty reduction, gender parity in education, and reliable access to safe water. But even before the global economic crisis, progress in achieving some MDGs, especially those on child and maternal mortality, primary school completion, hunger, and sanitation, was lagging. The global food, fuel and economic crises have set back progress to the MDGs. An estimated 64 million more people are living on less thanBacked by sound economic policies and until the global crisis, a buoyant global economy, many developing countries made significant movement toward achieving the 2015millennium Development Goals (MDGs), particularly those for poverty reduction, gender parity in education, and reliable access to safe water. But even before the global economic crisis, progress in achieving some MDGs, especially those on child and maternal mortality, primary school completion, hunger, and sanitation, was lagging. The global food, fuel and economic crises have set back progress to the MDGs. An estimated 64 million more people are living on less than .25/day than there would have been without the crisis. The challenges ahead are achieving the MDGs requires a vibrant global economy, powered by strong, sustainable, multi-polar growth, underpinned by sound policies and reform at the country level; improving access for the poor to health, education, affordable food, trade, finance, and basic infrastructure is key to accelerating progress to the MDGs; developing countries need to continue to strengthen resilience to global volatility in order to protect gains and sustain progress toward the MDGs; the international community must renew its commitment to reach the 'bottom billion', particularly those in fragile and conflict-affected countries; and global support for a comprehensive development agenda including through the G20 process is critical. In the wake of recent global crises, and with the 2015 deadline approaching, business as usual is not enough to meet the MDGs.
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