ERADICATING POVERTY IN THE 2030 AGENDA: SOME INTERGENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS Expert Group Meeting, DESA/DSPD, New York June 2016 Shantanu Mukherjee, Head, Report Team Human Development Report Office, UNDP
ERADICATING POVERTY IN THE 2030 AGENDA: SOME INTERGENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
Expert Group Meeting, DESA/DSPD, New York
June 2016
Shantanu Mukherjee, Head, Report Team Human Development Report Office, UNDP
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ROADMAP
An inter-generational approach: key elements
Eradicating poverty – a reality check
Making the most of the SDGs
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ERADICATING POVERTY IN A GENERATION- THE FIRST HALF
Eradication – what does it mean? Poverty lines Minimum levels The first 15 years: Sustained economic growth Better policies and programmes Shared political imperative Improved knowledge and understanding Substantially different challenges 0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
70.00
80.00
90.00
1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011
East Asia & Pacific(developing only)
Latin America & Caribbean(developing only)
South Asia
Sub-Saharan Africa(developing only)
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ERADICATING POVERTY IN A GENERATION- THE NEXT HALF
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
70.00
80.00
90.00
100.00
1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020 2023 2026 2029
GLOBAL MDG PROGRESS: CAN THE MDGs BE ACHIEVED?
INTER-GENERATIONAL ERADICATION OF POVERTY
Intra-generational eradication of deprivations Matching skills to opportunities – changes in the
distributions Cross-generational relationships
Mobilities are unequal
Unsustainability and climate change
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INTRA-GENERATIONAL ERADICATION OF DEPRIVATIONS
Skills for living: Parenting skills plus investments matter – broader than finances; public and private Multiple skills – cognitive, social, task-specific, adaptability, health ‘Skills beget skills’ – complementing across time periods Complement investments – cumulative impact Interventions matter: Baird et al (2015) following up on Miguel & Kremer (2004) – deworming of Kenyan children Annualised financial rate of return – 32% Gender differentiated outcomes
Source: Cunha and Heckman (2009)
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THE SCALE OF OVERLAPPING DEPRIVATIONS 0
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.1.1
5.2
.25
.3low
ess:
Depr
ivatio
n Co
unt
0 50 100 150Monthly household expenditure per capita in PPP $
Deprivation scores fall as expenditures rise Correlations generally low at every expenditure level In many contexts, accounting for multiple deprivations significantly increases the count of those left behind – e.g. in sample of 25 fragile states MPI-poor population is 1.5 billion
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MATCHING SKILLS TO OPPORTUNITIES – CHANGING DISTRIBUTIONS
Will existing drivers of poverty reduction continue to be as effective? Structural transformation Technological change – migrating jobs, redundant skills, increasing pace Social contract and organization
Source: Human Development Report: Work for Human Development (2015), UNDP
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CROSS GENERATIONAL DYNAMICS
Income, medical and care services for the elderly Pensions and transfers Distribution of aggregate resources Household provision of care- reinforcing gender roles, limiting women’s opportunities?
Source: World Population Prospects (2015), UN
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MOBILITIES ARE UNEQUAL
Intergenerational mobility can vary across groups Symptomatic of inequities
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1995 2005 2011
Nepal: 'Youth productive ability' quintiles and caste
HBC_high
AD_high
HBC_low
AD_low
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COMPOUNDING ALL CHALLENGES
Sustainability Repetto, Solow, Brundtland… From local to planetary scales Rapidity, inertia and potential irreversibility Interrelated challenges Disease vectors Agriculture Catastrophic shocks
Source: Steffen et al (2015)
GLOBAL MDG PROGRESS: CAN THE MDGs BE ACHIEVED?
SGDs: AN ERADICATION AGENDA
SDGs – over 70% are about leaving no one behind Poverty, hunger, health, learning, gender, water, energy,
sanitation, jobs and decent work, cities, industrialization, societies…
Many have identified who is being left behind and
how Bottom of the income distribution Working poor, smallholder farmers, rural Roma, indigenous and other minority ethnic groups Elder people and children Women Disabled
National political realities may differ
GLOBAL MDG PROGRESS: CAN THE MDGs BE ACHIEVED?
IMPLEMENTATION FOR ERADICATION
Overlapping deprivations, interlocking constraints and cumulative effects Need for varied, multi-dimensional, customized approaches Early childhood care and development, learning – preparing for the
unanticipated Aging – poverty of the old, poverty of the care givers
Leveraging the move to sustainability Moving to sustainable work – are we investing enough to allow the poorest
to access clean energy or improved agricultural practices? Is the global political environment conducive?
Artificial intelligence, mechanization, premature de-industrialisation – can poverty reduction keep up?
Climate change – enhancing vulnerability, adding urgency
GLOBAL MDG PROGRESS: CAN THE MDGs BE ACHIEVED?
THREE OVERARCHING CONSIDERATIONS –ONE BINDING CONSTRAINT?
Data and dynamic monitoring – advocacy and evidence Translating growth into removing constraints and providing
opportunities Individuals realize full potential Growth process draws on talent and skills of all
Deepening the normative basis Voting, bargaining and deliberation to shape collective choices Civil society voice and accountability Dealing with the reality of the minority
JUST ONE SPACE TO MOVE INTO
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