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“INTERNATIONAL
ACTION AGAINST CHILD POVERTY – MEETING
THE 2015 TARGETS”
WESTMINSTER
CONFERENCE
26
FEBRUARY 2001
SET OF SPECIFIC
ACTIONS TO MEET 2015 TARGETS – CONCLUDING STATEMENT BY CLARE SHORT,
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND GORDON BROWN,
CHANCELLOR OF EXCHEQUER
Background
We
enter the 21st century with nearly 10 million children
dying every year before their first birthday. 12 million die before
their 5th birthday. And 120 million children are without
even 5 years of schooling. In the face of these tragic facts – and
in the year of the United Nations Children’s Summit – all the participants
at the conference today recognised we must do much more to tackle
the poverty of today’s children and so build hope for the next generation.
Child
poverty and the seven international development targets
Over
the last ten years the nations of the world have agreed upon seven
international development targets to be achieved by 2015. Achieving
these targets would mean halving the proportion of children living
in poverty, making primary education accessible for all children,
ending discrimination against girls in education, dramatically improving
the health position of the poorest children and their families and
finally reversing the trend of environmental degradation so that there
is a sustainable world for our children to inherit.
Reaffirmation
of commitment to seven international targets
Today,
we all therefore reaffirmed our joint commitment to making every possible
effort to reach these international targets and acknowledged the need
to intensify our collective efforts. We aim, through achieving these
targets, to offer this generation of poor children the opportunities
denied to their parents.
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Roles
and responsibilities
We
all welcomed the stronger leadership role that developing countries
are starting to play, such as through the Millennium Programme for
the Renaissance of Africa and the Poverty Reduction Strategy process.
As
representatives from developed and developing countries, the private
sector, non-governmental organisations, faith communities and multilateral
institutions, we recognise the need to work within our powers and
responsibilities to ensure that a greater effort is made to guarantee
that the International Development Targets are met.
Our
joint responsibility for the targets must reinforce, not diminish,
accountability for the outcome. We all have a joint responsibility
to work towards these goals, with each accountable for actions within
specific responsibilities.
Today,
we agreed to work together to commit to a clear set of specific actions
for which we will all be individually accountable. These commitments
will enable us to deliver the international targets and so break the
intergenerational cycle, which would otherwise mean that today’s poor
children would become the parents of tomorrow’s poor children.
Our
discussions today have been a key step in the process of developing
such a set of actions. But we will need to work together over the
coming months to develop these further, with the aim of finalising
them in time for the UN Special Session on Children.
We
therefore welcome the specific commitments made by representatives
today in particular that
UNICEF will
- continue to invest in programmes to reduce infant and under-five
mortality and promote child survival;
- increase the share of resources for basic education to ensure
all children get a quality primary education, with a special emphasis
on girls.
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UNDP will
- ensure that UN development agencies focus their efforts around
realisation of the Millennium Declaration and the achievement
of the International Development Targets;
- work with government, civil society and private sector partners
to support nationally owned, inclusive Poverty Reduction Strategies;
- ensure that the UN system plays a full part in facilitating
both government led programmes and donor co-ordination;
- help developing countries set, measure and reach national poverty
reduction and human development targets. To this end, UNDP will
support country teams produce, in partnership with developing
countries, regular national reports which benchmark progress towards
the achievement of the Millennium Declaration and the International
Development Targets;
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- aggregate national reports into the Secretary-General’s annual
report on progress towards the achievement of the Millennium Declaration
and International Development Targets;
- upgrade the quality and impact of National Human Development
Reports;
- make the Secretary-General’s Global Compact 'local' by organising
action-oriented dialogue among stakeholders, including business,
civil society and government, with a view to promoting sustainable
and broad-based economic development.
World Health
Organisation will
- continue to provide bridge between research and development
and sound technical interventions in efforts to scale up the fight
against diseases of poverty
IMF
and World Bank will
- continue actively to use the International Development Targets
as a common framework to guide policies and programmes and to
assess their policies’ and programmes’ effectiveness;
- help governments to broaden participation and develop greater
ownership of macroeconomic, structural and social policy issues;
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- support governments in developing programmes, policies and
budgets that are in line with comprehensive poverty reduction
strategies and which are pro‑poor and pro‑growth,
shifting support towards activities that demonstrably benefit
poor people and promote both equity and efficiency;
- ensure that appropriate social impact analysis is undertaken
of structural reform measures, so that countervailing measures
can be put in place to support groups adversely affected by reforms;
- ensure appropriate flexibility in fiscal targets of IMF programmes
(such as in post‑conflict situations, in response to unexpected
external shocks; and to ensure that development assistance is
genuinely additional to a country’s own resources);
- assist governments to improve accountability of public resource
management (including by providing regular assessment in their
IMF review);
- assist governments to cost and regularly assess what needs to
be done in order to achieve their poverty reduction targets and
the International Development Targets;
- strengthen support to countries by further decentralisation
of World Bank functions and expertise.
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UK
will, and will encourage other developed countries through the OECD/DAC
and other fora to,
- make every effort to increase development assistance;
- increase the proportion of development assistance going to
the poorest countries;
- untie all development assistance;
- coordinate their efforts more effectively and ensure development
assistance is directed at the needs of the poorest, without consideration
of the convenience of the donor;
- base their assistance on countries’ own Poverty Reduction Strategies
by:
- limiting the administrative burdens placed upon recipient countries;
- ensuring
compatibility with countries’ budget-setting priorities and procedures
work;
- ensuring
donor support is used in support of long-term reform programmes
- ensure that level of development assistance is predictable;
- work to remove barriers to market access for all goods from
least developed countries;
- ensure export credit supports to poor countries are not used
for unproductive expenditures and tighten controls on small arms
transfers;
- renounce the right from this year onwards to any benefit from
the historic debt owed by the HIPC countries, in addition to committing
to write off 100% of all bilateral HIPC debts starting at decision
point.
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Developing
countries will
- analyse macroeconomic policies for impact on poverty reduction;
- ensure that poverty reduction policies fight all aspects of
inequity in their countries;
- ensure that Poverty Reduction Strategies demonstrate how they
will enable International Development Targets to be delivered;
- adopt fully costed programme budgets and comprehensive long
term expenditure frameworks;
- strengthen capacity to spend debt relief savings and new assistance
effectively on poverty reduction programmes and on improving the
quality of services;
- take the lead in co-ordinating donors, NGOs, faith groups and
the private sector in supporting country Poverty Reduction Strategies;
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- continue their efforts to empower the poor, by integrating
participation into all their democratic structures;
- work to strengthen the accountability of financial management
systems so as to eliminate corruption;
- accelerate efforts to improve domestic resource mobilisation
to increase domestic funding for poverty reduction;
- tightly limit new external borrowing for productive purposes;
- improve the access of the poor to equitable justice systems;
- intensify efforts to promote peace in their regions;
- strengthen health care systems and access for poor people (including
putting in place universal primary health care systems) so that
existing HIV/AIDS drugs and the new support investment treatments
can be made available to all.
Private
sector and medical research community will
- take the lessons and commitments made today to a parallel conference
on the role of business to be held later this year;
- develop at that conference an action plan to meet this challenge.
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Group
of seventeen NGOs will, and encourage other NGOs, Faith groups &
committed individuals to
- raise public awareness regarding the outrage of child poverty
and build global solidarity with poor girls, boys, women and men
as they struggle to secure their rights and better their lives;
- in partnership with poor communities and southern civil society
organisations work to overcome the causes of poverty and injustice
and specifically to:
- ensure that the poorest and most marginalised including children
speak and are heard in the decisions, processes and institutions
affecting their lives including Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers
and other resource allocation processes;
- ensure all decision makers are held accountable to poor people
of all ages for concrete progress towards the realisation of rights
and the achievement of the International Development Targets;
- campaign and advocate north and south for urgent action on international
debt, trade, education, health, HIV/AIDS, conflict and violence
and other key issues impacting directly on the ability of poor
countries and people to secure rights and achieve the International
Development Targets;
- assist government and communities through funding expertise
and other inputs in developing sustainable and participatory solutions
that improve the daily lives of poor children and their families.
Next steps
We
all agreed on the need to take action and to pursue any further measures
necessary in the months and years ahead to ensure the 2015 targets
are met in every country. We will be doing this in all the fora we
all work in, such as the HIPC Finance Ministers meeting in June 2001,
the UN Special Session for Children in September 2001, the World Bank
and IMF in the Spring and Annual meetings, and as we develop national
and international policy. The aim will be, year by year, country
by country, to improve the impact of our work in support of the world’s
poorest children.
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