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About the Goals The Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) are the world's time-bound and quantified targets for
addressing extreme poverty in its many dimensions-income poverty, hunger, disease,
lack of adequate shelter, and exclusion-while promoting gender equality, education,
and environmental sustainability. They are also basic human rights-the rights
of each person on the planet to health, education, shelter, and security.
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The world has made significant progress in achieving many of the Goals. Between
1990 and 2002 average overall incomes increased by approximately 21 percent. The
number of people in extreme poverty declined by an estimated 130 million 1. Child
mortality rates fell from 103 deaths per 1,000 live births a year to 88. Life
expectancy rose from 63 years to nearly 65 years. An additional 8 percent of the
developing world's people received access to water. And an additional 15 percent
acquired access to improved sanitation services.
But progress has been far
from uniform across the world-or across the Goals. There are huge disparities
across and within countries. Within countries, poverty is greatest for rural areas,
though urban poverty is also extensive, growing, and underreported by traditional
indicators. Sub-Saharan Africa is the epicenter of crisis, with continuing
food insecurity, a rise of extreme poverty, stunningly high child and maternal
mortality, and large numbers of people living in slums, and a widespread shortfall
for most of the MDGs. Asia is the region with the fastest progress, but even there
hundreds of millions of people remain in extreme poverty, and even fast-growing
countries fail to achieve some of the non-income Goals. Other regions have mixed
records, notably Latin America, the transition economies, and the Middle East
and North Africa, often with slow or no progress on some of the Goals and persistent
inequalities undermining progress on others. |