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Source of Information: The World Bank
Organization.
Eradicating Poverty For Stability And
Peace
WASHINGTON, October 3, 2004 – Saying that eradication of poverty is
central to global stability and peace, World Bank Group President
James D. Wolfensohn today issued an urgent call to action to make
the planet more equitable and safe, through the three pillars of
poverty reduction, environmental stewardship, and education of the
youth of the world.
Pointing to the recent violence in Afghanistan, Beslan, Darfur and
Iraq, Wolfensohn noted that the world is now focused on short-term
issues of immediate security, but he asked that the international
community not lose sight of longer-term solutions: “It is absolutely
right that, together, we fight terror. We must. The danger, however,
is that in our preoccupation with immediate threats, we lose sight
of the longer-term and equally urgent causes of our insecure world:
poverty, frustration, and lack of hope.”
“If we want stability on our planet, we must fight to end poverty,”
Wolfensohn said in his speech at the Annual Meeting of the Governors
of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. “Eradication of
poverty is central to stability and peace. It is still the challenge
of our time.”
“Making the planet equitable and safe is an issue that we all need
to come together on - and we need global leadership and political
will to do it,” Wolfensohn said. To make the world more balanced and
secure for future generations, Wolfensohn pointed to three urgent
priorities that must be managed to determine the collective future
of the globe:
· Protecting the planet--through better stewardship of our
environment;
· Scaling up poverty reduction; and
· Educating our youth differently for the 21st century—and giving
them hope.
To meet these challenges, Wolfensohn said, “We must raise our game
as an international community.”
Keep the Promise to Preserve our Planet
Wolfensohn stated that true and lasting development without
preserving the planet is simply not possible, and said that economic
growth should be promoted with a full awareness of the natural
systems on which all life depends.
“Growth does not have to come at the expense of the natural
environment. They work together,” Wolfensohn stated.
To ensure development is sustainable, Wolfensohn called upon the
world to harness new technologies and renewable energies:
“Environmental challenges affect all of us, but poor people are
particularly vulnerable. We must give higher priority to renewable
energy. New and clean technologies can allow the poor to achieve the
benefits of development without having to face the same
environmental costs the developed world has experienced,” Wolfensohn
said.
Eradicating Poverty for Stability and Peace
Wolfensohn noted that people in developing countries have the same
priorities as those in developed countries: “They want to live
safely and peacefully. Women want to build their lives free of
violence against them both inside and outside their homes. They want
education for their children. They want voice and respect. They want
to retain their cultural integrity. They want hope.” He added that,
for the poor, the definition of security is more immediate, “For
them, it is not about concrete barriers and military force. For
them, it is the chance to escape poverty.”
Wolfensohn made clear the challenge of poverty:
“Half the people in the world live on less than $2 a day. A fifth
live on less than a $1 a day. Over the next 25 years, two billion
more people will be added to the global population – 97 percent of
them in developing countries, most of them born into poverty.”
To address the urgent needs of the poor, Wolfensohn called upon the
donor community to increase funding to the International Development
Association (IDA), the World Bank’s lending arm for the poorest
countries.
“The countries eligible for IDA are home to 80 percent of the
world’s poorest people who live on $1 a day. IDA is a truly
remarkable instrument, designed to be effective and accountable. I
hope our shareholders will increase their contributions to the next
replenishment. We must keep IDA strong.”
Wolfensohn stated that the nexus between poverty and security has
been widely accepted by the international community over the past
sixty years:
“Since the time of the Bretton Woods Conference, through the Pearson
Commission, the Brandt Commission, and the Brundtland Commission,
through to statements of our leaders at the 2000 Millennium Assembly
- and today - all confirm that the eradication of poverty is central
to stability and peace.”
“The message is clear – we can scale up poverty reduction and thus
build a more secure world.”
Education To Create A Better World
Noting that it was critical to pursue the Millennium Development
Goal of getting all children into school by 2015, Wolfensohn called
for the need to recognize that education is not just about getting
kids into school. “Content and quality are key—and children need to
stay in school.”
Wolfensohn also made clear that education begins with early
childhood development, “because we know that a child’s future is
largely determined in the first six years of life.”
The World Bank President also issued a call for more understanding
among children around the globe, as a long-term way to bring
stability to the world: “Children in developed and developing
countries also need to learn more about each other. I fear that
today there is too much education for hate that will not be reversed
in later years.”
Meeting the Challenge
To drive home the point that these urgent needs are achievable,
Wolfensohn pointed out the remarkable development achievements of
the past decades:
“We know that development works. Over the last two decades alone,
the proportion of people in poverty in the world fell by half - from
40 percent to 21 percent. Life expectancy in developing countries
has increased by 20 years. Adult illiteracy has been halved to 22
percent.
He added, “Over the past decade, a quiet revolution has taken place
in the effectiveness of development assistance: with countries
taking ownership of their own programs; with aid being focused on
good policies; and with increasing coordination among donors. Taken
together, these changes can help us double or triple the impact of
aid in the coming decade.”
Wolfensohn also noted recent promises from developed countries on
aid, trade and debt relief at meetings in Doha, Monterrey, and
Johannesburg, and he welcomed further action from the international
community:
“We are very supportive of the proposals on aid and debt reduction
that have been put forward by the US, UK, France, Brazil, and
others.”
Much work remains, however, and Wolfensohn noted with caution that
with 10 short years to go until 2015, the Millennium Development
Goals remain at risk of slipping away.
“Thanks to China and India, we know that the overall objective of
cutting poverty in half will likely be met. But we also already know
that most of the other goals, for most countries, will not be met.
Africa, in particular, will be left far behind.”
Wolfensohn called attention to the borderless nature of the world in
which we live, saying, “We are one world. Damage to the environment
somewhere is damage everywhere. Poverty somewhere is poverty
everywhere. Terror somewhere is terror everywhere. If there is a
bombing in Bali, or Madrid, or Moscow, we all get scared. We all
feel insecure.”
In closing, Wolfensohn said that making the planet equitable and
safe is an issue that we all need to come together on:
“It is our duty to ourselves. It is our duty to our children. It is
the choice we must make for security and peace.”
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