Millennium Development Goals
By 2015 |
The Reality |
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Goal 1 |
Eradicate extreme hunger and poverty |
The UN recognises that 800 million people go hungry every day. Goal One will not be reached in Africa until 2147, on current trends. |
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Goal 2 |
Achieve universal primary education. |
As many as 113 million children do not attend school. |
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Goal 3 |
Promote gender equality and empower women. |
Two-thirds of those who are non-literate are women. |
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Goal 4 |
Reduce child mortality. |
In developing countries, one child in 11 dies before its fifth birthday, compared with 1 in 143 in developed countries. |
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Goal 5 |
Improve maternal health. |
In the developing world, the risk of dying in childbirth is one in 48, compared to one in 1,800 in the developed world. |
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Goal 6 |
Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases. |
An additional 45 million people will become infected with HIV in developing countries between 2002 and 2010, unless the world mounts a more effective campaign to halt the disease’s spread. |
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Goal 7 |
Ensure environmental sustainability. |
At current rates of progress, 1 billion people will still have no access to clean water and 83 countries will miss the goal altogether. |
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Goal 8 |
Develop a global partnership for development. |
Global aid needs to double from 50 billion US Dollars to 100 billion US Dollars per annum, if the Goals are to be achieved |
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Source: Trócaire’s www.keepourword.org |
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In a 2005 report, Trócaire found that MDGs were not being reached or were being manipulated by national governments. In response, Trócaire made four recommendations to make MDGs more feasible:
- Stronger emphasis on human rights, national priorities, and local participation in MDGs;
- Reform of Global Governance – the UN, IMF and WB, as well as the WTO - making them more democratic and more responsive to local political realities, in particular the needs of the poor;
- Global Trade to take account of people’s rights to food, shelter, work and health;
- Aid from OECD countries to be increased to 0.7% of gross national product (GNP) and the aid system reformed, including 100% debt cancellation for poorer countries, making it less dependent on rich countries’ priorities.
(Source: Trócaire, (2005) More than a Numbers Game, www.trocaire.org/policyandadvocacy/mdgs/ )


