ICYO – YOUTH INFORMATION
No 2007/66
(E
- newsletter from network of Indian youth organizations)
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ASIA-PACIFIC:
MDGs Progress Unknown for Lack of Data
BANGKOK, Oct 8
(IPS) - In a moment of rare candour, officials from a regional United Nations
body and the Asia Development Bank (AsDB) admitted that studies to gauge
progress of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are hampered by out-of-date
information.
The revelations
came during the launch of a report to assess progress of countries in the
Asia-Pacific region at midpoint to the 2015 deadline for achievement of the
MDGs. The most comprehensive data available for the region’s MDG calculations
is for 1999, the year before the Millennium Summit in September 2000 when the
world’s leaders pledged to meet a series of development targets in the next 15
years.
‘’In many
countries, the data provided at the national level is not reliable,’’ Raj
Kumar, principal officer at the United Nations Economic and Social Commission
for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), based in Bangkok, told IPS. ‘’The most
comprehensive, comparable figures we have for the Asia-Pacific region are for
1999.’’
It echoed the
view of Pietro Gennari, chief of ESCAP’s statistic division, who presented the
region’s MDG report card. ‘’There are still many data gaps in the MDG database.
The data is scattered over time and across countries,’’ he said during the
launch of the 56-page report published by ESCAP, the Manila-based AsDB and the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
‘’Social data in
countries can be more difficult to collect when the mechanisms are not there,’’
Jean-Pierre Verbiest, AsDB’s country director for Thailand, said in an
interview.
The revelations
of this information black hole drew caustic responses from civil society
organisations that have been monitoring the U.N.-led MDG campaign. ‘’We are not
surprised by this admission about a lack of information,’’ says Anoop
Sukumaran, a researcher at Focus on the Global South, a Bangkok-based think
tank. ‘’We have been asking this question about reliable information from the
very beginning.’’
‘’When they now
say that the numbers and the data they have is problematic, it raises
fundamental questions about the thesis on which they have gone about this MDG
business,’’ he explained to IPS. ‘’It means the very foundation is shaky about
solving the problem and achieving the MDGs.’’
What is also
troubling to civil society organisations is that the confession comes after
large amounts of money have been spent and a global bureaucracy created around
the MDG campaign since 2000. Typical is the role of the UNDP to help train
authorities in the developing world to collect MDG-related data. The MDGs have
also been used as a popular mantra by U.N. agencies and the AsDB to launch
regular reports over the past seven years to cheer on this campaign.
The call for the
MDGs arose from a need to set time-bound goals in specific areas to improve the
quality of life for the world’s weak and marginalised living in the developing
world, where the planet’s majority resides. The first goal was to cut by half
the number of people living in extreme poverty -- or who live below the income
of one U.S. dollar a day -- by 2015.
The second and
third goal dealt with education, where all children, both boys and girls, will
be able to complete a full course of primary schooling and the elimination of
the gender gap in primary and secondary education by 2015.
There were also
targets set to reduce child mortality -- reduce by two-thirds between 1990 and
2015, the death rates of children under five years of age -- and improve
maternal health, by aiming to slash by three-quarters the maternal mortality
ratio.
The last three of
the eight MDGs called for action to halt the spread of global killer diseases
such as HIV/AIDS and malaria, ensure environmental sustainability and to create
a new ‘’global partnership’’ for development between the developing and the
industrialised world.
This week’s
report on the Asia-Pacific region warned that the child mortality, malnutrition
and maternal health care remained a daunting challenge, with the limited
progress on slashing child malnutrition being on par with the numbers in
Sub-Saharan Africa. The region accounts for 100 million of the world’s
malnourished children, which is 65 percent of the world’s total. ‘’South-Asia
alone accounts for 80 million underweight children,’’ said Gennari.
On the push to
achieve the goal of universal primary education, the results are mixed. ‘’The
Asia-Pacific region has done quite well, enrolling nearly 94 percent of
school-age children -- still behind Latin America and the Caribbean, which with
a 97 percent rate counts as an early achiever, but some way ahead of
Sub-Saharan Africa’s 70 percent,’’ states the report. ‘’Nevertheless this
region still accounts for one in three of the world’s children out of school.’’
Yet the admission
about the lack of recent, comprehensive data hampers the picture about the
benchmarks reached half-way into the MDGs. And officials IPS spoke to admitted
that part of the problem lies with the way governments in the region view the
need to collect and share information about the local social indicators.
‘’Getting
information on social issues is much more difficult than getting economic
data,’’ says Kumar of ESCAP. ‘’This is not a high priority for most
governments. And they do not see it as a good thing, too, about why they should
reveal information about child mortality and malnutrition at home.’’
This information
gap, furthermore, was another feature that the MDGs set out to resolve. ‘’When
the MDGs were introduced, it meant for the first time as an attempt to actually
measure government polices and targets,’’ says Verbiest of AsDB. ‘’At that time
we knew there was data missing. And one of the achievements of the MDGs was to
get accurate data and measure it.’’
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Indian Committee of Youth Organizations
(ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network organization,
committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and understanding among
different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and individuals working
in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization
of youth NGOs in India. It's family consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal:
To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
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Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign;
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YDP Network;
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International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia