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1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific
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1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific.

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Dr. Noeleen HeyzerUnder-Secretary-General of the United Nations

and Executive Secretary of ESCAP

MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific

Page 2: 1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific.

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Key ESCAP Resources on MDGs

Page 3: 1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific.

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Impressive progress

Impressive gains in many MDG indicators, especially in reducing poverty.

Between 1990 and 2005, the number of poor people declined from 1.5 billion to 947 million

The region is also on track for another key target namely universal access to primary school

Asia and the Pacific is an early achiever for some targets

Reducing gender disparities in primary and tertiary education Halving the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water Stopping the spread of HIV and AIDS and tuberculosis Reducing consumption of ozone-depleting substances

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But the region is lagging behind for some important targets

Slow progress on many others such as

– In reducing hunger

– In achieving higher standards of health

– In ensuring that girls and boys complete the primary education

– In reducing child mortality

– In improving maternal health

– In providing basic sanitation

Need to step up efforts

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Country groups on and off track for the MDGs

Status of achievement for 21 indicators based on latest internationally comparable data for sub-regions

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Considerable variation between country groupings and sub-regions

The region’s 14 least developed countries have made slow or no progress on most indicators

Performing well only on gender equality in primary and secondary education and in reducing the prevalence of HIV and AIDS and TB.

The greatest progress has been made by South-East Asia which has already achieved nine out of the 21 assessed indicators and is on track for another four

The North and Central-Asian countries (including Russian Federation) are also early achievers for eight of the indicators

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South Asia is an early achiever or on track for nine indicators but is progressing only slowly on many others

The Pacific Island countries have also been less successful, regressing or making no progress in 11 indicators and advancing only slowly in another three

Also moving forward slowly on expanding access to improved sanitation facilities and safe drinking water

Considerable variation between country groupings and sub-regions

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• The Proportion of undernourished has fallen only slightly

• The total number of hungry people barely changed.

Source: FAO

Undernourishment by Regions  % of population millions 

  1990-92 2004-06 1990-92 2004-06

Asia and the Pacific 20 16 586 566

East Asia 15 10 183 136

Southeast Asia 24 15 106 85

South Asia 25 23 286 337

Central Asia 8 10 4 6

Western Asia 38 13 6 2

Oceania 12 13 1 1

Latin America and the Caribbean 12 8 53 45

Near East and North Africa 6 8 19 34

Sub-Saharan Africa 34 30 169 212

Developing World 20 16 826 858

WORLD 16 13 845 873

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• Creating jobs and increasing incomes

• Boosting agricultural production

• Maintaining stable and reasonable food prices

• Providing safety nets for the poor

• Implementing feeding programmes

Strategies to Reduce Hunger and Improve Food Security

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Improving Basic Services such as Health and Education is a Key for Achievement of Many MDGs

• Investing more in basic services

• Ensuring social inclusion and equal access to social services

• Giving priority to maternal and child health

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Strengthening basic infrastructure

Achieving the MDGs in the region will require stronger basic infrastructure, particularly road transport, water supply, sanitation, electricity, information technology, telecommunications and urban low-income housing

The linkage between poverty reduction and infrastructure has been established through several regional studies.

Better rural roads, for example, expand markets for marginal and small farmers and thus reduce rural poverty

They also allow households better access to schools and health centres.

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Infrastructure gaps in the Asia-Pacific

• Infrastructure gaps in Asia-Pacific are wide between countries and within countries

• e.g.– About 23% of households still without access to electricity– About 24% of rural population do not have access to all-season

roads

• Closing infrastructure gaps • For 2010-2020, the needs are nearly $800 billion per annum• Also an opportunity to generate additional aggregate demand for

sustaining the region’s dynamism in post-crisis world• Scope for regional cooperation in infrastructure development• Regional financial architecture could assist in efficiently

mobilizing regional savings for closing these gaps

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Seven key drivers for accelerating progress towards MDGs

• Rebalancing Asia-Pacific economies in favour of greater domestic consumption

• Making economic growth more inclusive and sustainable

• Strengthening social protection

• Reducing persistent gender gaps

• Ensuring financial inclusion

• Boosting international economic assistance and

• Exploiting the potential of South-South cooperation and regional cooperation

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Towards 2015 The list of drivers is by no means exhaustive

Each country has to address its own specific needs and opportunities

They can help accelerate progress towards many of the goals where the progress has been slow in order to sectoral priorities

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Copy of presentation can be downloaded at:

www.un.org/regionalcommissions