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Poverty, hunger, still

threaten MDG
The attainment of the Millennium Development Goals set by the United Nations in 2000 is
expected to pave the way for the adoption of the new sustainable development agenda

Jodesz Gavilan

Published 3:05 PM, July 07, 2015

Updated 12:50 PM, September 21, 2015

MANILA, Philippines The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) deadline has passed, and
what now?

According to the final MDG report launched by the United Nations (UN) on Tuesday, July 7,
the success in meeting set goals will pave the way for the new sustainable development
agenda being adopted in 2015.

The annual assessment of global and regional progress found that the 15-year effort to
achieve the goals set during the Millennium Declaration in 2000 was largely successful
globally.

Goal-setting, the UN report confirms, can relieve the world of its problems such as poverty,
hunger, and social inequality, among others. Targeted interventions, strategies, adequate
resources, and firm political will are important in attaining progress, even in the poorest
sector.

The MDGs have greatly contributed to this progress and have taught us how governments,
business and civil society can work together to achieve transformational breakthroughs, UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a statement.
Decreased poverty, hungershagdhsagdfdasdadasdassd

The goals set produced the most successful anti-poverty movement in history, the report
said, and it will now serve as a springboard to realize the post-2015 agenda.

The population living in extreme poverty has been halved. From 1990s 1.9 billion, there are
now 836 million people surviving with only $1.25 (P56.39)* a day, with progress recorded
mostly since 2000.

In 2015 alone, it is estimated that 175 million are going to be lifted out of poverty.
Meanwhile, the number of people suffering from hunger and undernourishment has
decreased throughout the 15 years.

The prevalence of undernourishment among children under 5 years old has been halved
from 1990s 31% to 2015s 16%. This pulls down underweight children from one in 5 to
only one in 7 children.

The decline, according to the report, is continuous but not fast enough and will need more
push in the years to come.

Inequality among countries and social classes however remain constant. This leaves
significant gaps that may hinder developing countries from attaining progress and eventual
eradication of hunger and poverty. The worlds poorest are distributed very unevenly
across regions and countries. An overwhelming majority of people who try to survive under
the poverty line 80 hawdllcad,% of the global total of extremely poor people can be
found in two regions: Southern Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Meanwhile, 490 million people or two-thirds of the global population of people suffering from
hunger reside in Asia Pacific despite successfully achieving the target.

Far from over

It cannot be denied, however, that extreme poverty still exists despite the enormous
progress achieved. Almost 800 million people are still burdened by hunger and poverty,
limiting their potential.

These people are more likely to still suffer from risks due to health disadvantages, child and
maternal mortality, elevated school dropout rates, and inadequate sanitation. In fact, the
report added that about 16,000 children die each day before they reach their 5th birthday
due to these factors.

The target of halving the population might have been met but the UN admits the world is far
from eradicating poverty and hunger at least a generation more.
Following profound and consistent gains, we now know that extreme poverty can be
eradicated within one more generation, Ban Ki-moon said.

In addition, those who have successfully managed to be pulled out of the poverty and
hunger trap are still very vulnerable and their relief are deemed temporary. They can be
pushed back again due to looming factors such as economic shocks, food insecurity, and
climate change.

To address this, leaders around the world have called for an ambitious long-term
sustainable agenda post-MDG that would build on its success.

The emerging post-2015 development agenda, including the set of Sustainable


Development Goals, strives to build on our successes and put all countries, together, firmly
on track towards a more prosperous, sustainable and equitable world, Ban Ki-moon
explained. Rappler.com

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