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Today, the gap between the world's rich and poor is wider than
ever. Global injustices such as poverty, AIDS, malnutrition,
conflict and illiteracy remain rife.
Despite the promises of world leaders, at our present sluggish
rate of progress the world will fail dismally to reach
internationally agreed targets to halve global poverty by 2015.
World poverty is sustained not by chance or nature, but by a
combination of factors: injustice in global trade; the huge
burden of debt; insufficient and ineffective aid. Each of these
is exacerbated by inappropriate economic policies imposed by
rich countries.But it doesn't have to be this way. These factors
are determined by human decisions.
2005 offers an exceptional series of opportunities for the UK to
take a lead internationally, to start turning things around.
Next year, as the UK hosts the annual G8 gathering of powerful
world leaders and heads up the European Union (EU), the UK
Government will be a particularly influential player on the
world stage.
A
sea change is needed. By mobilising popular support across a
unique string of events and actions, we will press our own
government to compel rich countries to fulfil their obligations
and promises to help eradicate poverty, and to rethink some
long-held assumptions.
MAKE POVERTY HISTORY urges the government and international
decision makers to rise to the challenge of 2005. We are calling
for urgent and meaningful policy change on three critical and
inextricably linked areas: trade, debt and aid.
1. Trade justice
·
Fight for rules that ensure
governments, particularly in poor countries, can choose the best
solutions to end poverty and protect the environment. These will
not always be free trade policies.
·
End export subsidies that damage the
livelihoods of poor rural communities around the world.
·
Make laws that stop big business
profiting at the expense of people and the environment.
The rules of international trade are stacked in favour of the
most powerful countries and their businesses. On the one hand
these rules allow rich countries to pay their farmers and
companies subsidies to export food - destroying the livelihoods
of poor farmers. On the other, poverty eradication, human rights
and environmental protection come a poor second to the goal of
'eliminating trade barriers'.
We
need trade justice not free trade. This means the EU
single-handedly putting an end to its damaging agricultural
export subsidies now; it means ensuring poor countries can feed
their people by protecting their own farmers and staple crops;
it means ensuring governments can effectively regulate water
companies by keeping water out of world trade rules; and it
means ensuring trade rules do not undermine core labour
standards.
We
need to stop the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF)
forcing poor countries to open their markets to trade with rich
countries, which has proved so disastrous over the past 20
years; the EU must drop its demand that former European colonies
open their markets and give more rights to big companies; we
need to regulate companies - making them accountable for their
social and environmental impact both here and abroad; and we
must ensure that countries are able to regulate foreign
investment in a way that best suits their own needs.
2. Drop the debt
·
The unpayable debts of the world's
poorest countries should be cancelled in full, by fair and
transparent means.
Despite grand statements from world leaders, the debt crisis is
far from over. Rich countries have not delivered on the promise
they made more than six years ago to cancel unpayable poor
country debts. As a result, many countries still have to spend
more on debt repayments than on meeting the needs of their
people.
Rich countries and the institutions they control must act now to
cancel all the unpayable debts of the poorest countries. They
should not do this by depriving poor countries of new aid, but
by digging into their pockets and providing new money.
The task of calculating how much debt should be cancelled must
no longer be left to creditors concerned mainly with minimising
their own costs. Instead, we need a fair and transparent
international process to make sure that human needs take
priority over debt repayments.
International institutions like the IMF and World Bank must stop
asking poor countries to jump through hoops in order to qualify
for debt relief. Poor countries should no longer have to
privatise basic services or liberalise economies as a condition
for getting the debt relief they so desperately need.
And to avoid another debt crisis hard on the heels of the first,
poor countries need to be given more grants, rather than seeing
their debt burden piled even higher with yet more loans.
3. More and better aid
·
Donors must now deliver at least $50
billion more in aid and set a binding timetable for spending
0.7% of national income on aid. Aid must also be made to work
more effectively for poor people.
Poverty will not be eradicated without an immediate and major
increase in international aid. Rich countries have promised to
provide the extra money needed to meet intemationally agreed
poverty reduction targets. This amounts to at least $50 billion
per year, according to official estimates, and must be delivered
now.
Rich countries have also promised to provide 0.7% of their
national income in aid and they must now make good on their
commitment by setting a binding timetable to reach this target.
However, without far-reaching changes in how aid is delivered,
it won't achieve maximum benefits.
Two key areas of reform are needed.
First, aid needs to focus better on poor people's needs. This
means more aid being spent on areas such as basic healthcare and
education. Aid should no longer be tied to goods and services
from the donor, so ensuring that more money is spent in the
poorest countries. And the World Bank and the IMF must become
fully democratic in order for poor people's concerns to be
heard.
Second, aid should support poor countries and communities' own
plans and paths out of poverty.
Aid should therefore no longer be conditional on recipients
promising economic change like privatising or deregulating their
services, cutting health and education spending, or opening up
their markets: these are unfair practices that have never been
proven to reduce poverty. And aid needs to be made predictable,
so that poor countries can plan effectively and take control of
their own budgets in the fight against poverty.
MAKE POVERTY HISTORY is a unique
UK
alliance of charities, trade unions, campaigning groups and
celebrities who are mobilising around key opportunities in 2005
to drive forward the struggle against poverty and injustice.
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