World Bank President James D. Wolfensohn has called for the international development community to recommit to fighting poverty and meeting the Millennium Development Goals in 2004.
Mr Wolfensohn, in assessing 2003 and outlining the challenges for the coming year, said that while the focus of the world had been on major crises in the Middle East, Latin America and South Asia during 2003, poverty remained a major underlying factor in the worlds problems.
The World Banks Global Economic Prospects 2004, released earlier this year, estimated that about 1,1 billion people were living on less than 1 dollar a day and about 2,7 billion people continued to live on less than 2 dollar a day.
– For us at this institution, we are trying to remind the world that the real issues that we have to confront, which is at the base of so much that has happened, is the conquest of poverty, he said.
– We believe that in fighting poverty, we are doing the best work that can be done to achieve stability and to achieve peace, Mr Wolfensohn said.
Next May, the World Bank will be co-sponsoring with the Chinese Government a major conference in Shanghai on how to reduce poverty. Among the focuses of the conference will be how to replicate successful poverty reduction programs to produce the widest possible benefits.
Mr Wolfensohns comments echoed his speech at the World Banks annual meeting in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in September, where he said the world was “out of balance”.
– In our world of 6 billion people, one billion own 80 percent of global GDP (gross domestic product), while another billion struggle to survive on less than a dollar a day, he told the annual meeting.
He called for action to increase aid levels – which have fallen from 0,5 percent of GDP in the 1960s to about 0,22 percent today – and for developing and rich countries to take action to reduce poverty.
In his end of year message to staff and the Banks partners in the international development community, Mr Wolfensohn said 2003 had been a very difficult year, marked by conflict and the continued growth of HIV-AIDS “in too many countries”.
UNAIDS estimates that as many as 5 million new HIV infections occurred in the past 12 months and that the epidemic claimed 3 million lives in the same period. UNAIDS estimates that about 40 million people worldwide are living with HIV-AIDS.
Kilde: Verdensbankens hjemmeside www.worldbank.org