A group of prominent American business leaders are pressuring the US to do more in helping end global poverty by increasing its annual aid, the Push Journal reported Thursday.
Founding members of the Initiative for Global Development (IGD) are trying to “educate, cajole (snakke godt for/lokke) and, if necessary, shame America into helping the poorest of the worlds poor”.
The groups top priority is getting the US to boost its annual spending on anti-poverty programs to 36 billion US dollars, an increase of 20 billion US dollar (116 milliarder DKR).
Those funds, which would include government and private sector money, could go toward bed nets to prevent malaria or the elimination of school fees to boost education.
Other means to reduce poverty include providing clean water, schooling and adequate healthcare for the 1,2 billion people who exist on less than one US dollar (5,80 DKR) a day.
The group includes Bill Gates, father of the Microsoft Corp. and William Clapp, whose family helped found the Weyerhaeuser timber company.
Alarmed by Americas sagging (synkende/flove) image and the growing disparity in global wealth, the group has been trying to convince skeptical company executives that by helping end global poverty, Americas future prosperity and security could be ensured in a world ” preoccupied by terrorism threats and rising gasoline prices”.
The Bush administration has been accused of sullying (tilsøle/plette) Americas image abroad by pursuing an unpopular war in Iraq and spurning (afvise/vrage) multilateral initiatives such as the Kyoto environmental treaty.
Members of the group have traveled around the country to promote their cause. The persistence of the Seattle-based organization has earned the support of anti-poverty experts such as economist Jeffrey D. Sachs and the attention of President George W. Bush.
The group holds its national summit on global poverty in Washington, D.C. on Thursday. Bush has agreed to appear at the meeting.
The chief executives of many of the American Northwests leading companies, including Microsoft, Starbucks Corp. and Recreational Equipment Inc., have joined the cause, said the paper.
The World Bank and the UN have estimated that it would take an additional 40 billion to 60 billion US dollar a year to make “substantial progress” in eliminating extreme global poverty.
The initiative has proposed that the US contribute about one-third of that amount, which would equal its share of global gross domestic product.
Kilder: Xinhua General News Service og The Push Journal