[Gcap-mujeres] Poverty is not decreasing as the World Bank claims

Social Watch socwatch en socialwatch.org
Dom Sep 21 22:33:33 UYT 2008


Social Watch launches 2008 Basic Capabilities Index (BCI)

Complete information available at:

www.socialwatch.org/en/avancesyRetrocesos/ICB_2008/index.htm


PRESS RELEASE

Poverty is not decreasing as the World Bank claims,
argues a civil society monitoring organization

New York, September 22 – On the eve of a UN presidential meeting on
poverty reduction the mainstream consensus that globalization is reducing
poverty around the world was challenged today by Social Watch, a network
of 400 civil society organizations in 70 countries. The World Bank latest
estimates, announced last August, claim that extreme poverty has been
reduced by half in the last 25 years and that therefore the
internationally agreed goals for 2015 can be met.

Social Watch published today a Basic Capabilities Index showing that since
the UN Millennium Declaration was adopted in the year 2000, the
satisfaction of basic social needs that characterize poverty situations is
not progressing enough or even regressing in a majority of countries.

In the Millennium Declaration the heads of State and government of the
world promised to “spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and
children from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty,
to which more than a billion of them are currently subjectedâ€, and
resolved therefore “to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of the
world’s people whose income is less than one dollar a dayâ€. This
commitment is the first of eight Millennium Development Goals.

The Basic Capabilities Index, made public today by Social Watch, provides
a consistent general overview of the health status and basic educational
performance of each country and is proven to be in close correlation to
the measurement of other capabilities related to countries’ social
development. Out of 176 countries for which Social Watch computed a BCI
figure, only 21 register noticeable progress in relation to how they were
in 2000. Other 55 countries show progress that is slight and slow, while
77 countries are stagnant.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has highlighted that “the MDGs set
time-bound targets, by which progress can be measured.â€

The measurability of the MDGs is key to their success. Same as the Olympic
Games base their appeal in the simple notion that all players abide by the
same rule and a set of impartial referees and scorekeepers guard the
integrity of “fair playâ€, the MDGs derive their capacity to motivate
decision-makers and mobilize public support in their being time-bound and
measurable.

In order to monitor progress towards the MDGs at a global level and
country by country, the eight goals were subdivided in 48 indicators,
ranging from the proportion of the population below USD 1 a day (adjusted
by the purchasing power parity of their income) to the percentage of
internet users. Since January 15, 2008 the list of indicators has been
officially expanded to more than 60, so as to be able to include data on
issues like employment that were not counted before.

In real life, though, for most of the developing countries there are no
accurate or updated data for many, if not most, of those 60 indicators,
and the set is too complicated for non-experts. Thus, the World
Bank-defined poverty line of USD 1 a day became the de facto yardstick
with which progress was being measured. In 2000 the figure of 1.2 billion
people living in poverty was massively circulated and quoted indirectly by
the heads of state themselves in the Millennium Declaration: “We will
spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and children from the abject
and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a
billion of them are currently subjected.â€

By October 2007 the number of people living in extreme poverty had been
reduced substantially: “Nearly one billion people live on just USD 1 a
day†said World Bank President Robert B. Zoelick in his address to the
Board of Governors of his institution. By June 2008, the draft Accra
Action Agenda on aid, authored mainly by donor governments and the
secretariats of the World Bank and the OECD stated that “progress has been
made. Fifteen years ago, one of every three people lived on less than one
dollar a day; today, that figure has been reduced to one in five. Yet one
billion people still live in extreme povertyâ€.

All of a sudden, in August 26, 2008 the World Bank announced that poverty
estimates had been revised and the number of extremely poor people was
actually 1.4 billion in 2005. An overnight increase of almost 50%! Yet,
according to Martin Ravallion, director of the Bank’s Research Group, “the
developing world is poorer than we thought but no less successful in the
fight against povertyâ€. In order to substantiate such an optimistic view,
the team led by Ravallion and Shaohua Chen revised the poverty figures all
the way back to 1981 and claimed the previous estimates were mistaken.
According to their reassessment, the proportion of poor people has been
cut to half in the last 25 years and, therefore, it can still be reduced
enough to meet the MDG number 1 by 2015.

Social Watch coordinator Roberto Bissio argues that the USD 1 a day
indicator is the wrong indicator. But “even if the concept behind that
indicator had been right, we know now that the estimates were wrong. And
even if the new estimates and their recalculated history are right, the
trend of the last years is not a forecast of the futureâ€. The World Bank
has indeed recognized that its August estimates “do not yet reflect the
potentially large adverse effects on poor people of rising food and fuel
prices since 2005â€.

Using three simple indicators available for most countries in the world
and averaging them in a way that any secondary school student can repeat,
the national and international trends in the fight against poverty can
easily and convincingly be assessed. The resulting picture is not rosy.
“Policy makers need to understand that the credibility of their
commitments relies, like in the Olympic Games, in honest scorekeeping,
independent referees and rules that do not change in the middle of the
game. An adverse half time result might be bad news for the coach, but it
allows a change of strategies for the second halfâ€, concludes Bissio.

Complete information available at:

www.socialwatch.org/en/avancesyRetrocesos/ICB_2008/index.htm

For more information contact/spokesperson

Roberto Bissio
Social Watch Coordinator
Mobile: +336 219 83661
E-mail: socwatch en socialwatch.org
www.socialwatch.org

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