World Bank Urges More Balanced Global Approach To Development
World Development Report Warns Environmental Problems and Social
Unrest Threaten International Poverty Reduction Goals
News Release No:2003/37/S
Contacts: Damian Milverton (202) 473-6735
Cell: (202) 288-9029
dmilverton@worldbank.org
Ana E. Luna (202) 473-2907
alunabarros@worldbank.org
Cynthia Case McMahon (TV/Radio) (202) 473-2243
Ccase@worldbank.org
Also available:
Press Conference Transcript
Regional Press Releases:
Africa, East Asia & the Pacific,
Middle East & North Africa, South Asia
For complete text of the report visit the
World Development Report 2003 website:
http://econ.worldbank.org/wdr/wdr2003/
WASHINGTON, August 21, 2002 — The next 50 years could see
a fourfold increase in the size of the global economy and significant
reductions in poverty, provided that governments act now to avert
a growing risk of severe damage to the environment and profound
social unrest, according to a new World Bank report.
In nearly 50 years, the world could have a gross domestic product
of $140 trillion and a total population of nine billion people,
up from six billion today. Without better policies and institutions,
social and environmental strains may derail development progress,
leading to higher poverty levels and a decline in the quality
of life for everybody, according to the World Development Report
2003.
The World Bank is calling on heads of state, ministers, private
sector leaders, and civil society representatives at next week's
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg to reach
agreement on steps that can be taken now to ensure that poverty-reducing
growth does not come at great cost to future generations.
Misguided policies and weak governance in past decades have contributed
to environmental disasters, income inequality, and social upheaval
in some countries, often resulting in deep deprivation, riots,
or refugees fleeing famine or civil wars.
Today, many poor people depend on fragile natural resources to
survive. Similarly, trust between individuals, which can be eroded
or destroyed by civic unrest, is a social asset with important
economic benefits, since it enables people to make agreements
and undertake transactions that would otherwise not be possible.
Development polices need to be more sharply focused on protecting
these natural and social assets, the report said.
The World Development Report 2003 suggests new alliances are
needed at the local, national and global levels to better address
these problems. The burden for development must be shared more
widely. Rich countries must further open their markets and cut
agricultural subsidies that depress incomes of third world farmers,
and they must increase the flow of aid, medicines, and new technologies
to developing countries. Governments in the developing world,
in turn, must become more accountable and transparent, and ensure
that poor people are able to obtain secure land tenure, as well
as access to education, health care, and other basic services.
The report says that the next few years offer the opportunity
to shape investment patterns to make more efficient use of natural
resources, to protect the environment, and to bring deep reductions
in poverty. The Bank is urging world leaders to take advantage
of the spirit behind such recent milestones as the Monterrey Consensus,
the compact adopted by the United Nations at the March 2002 International
Conference on Financing for Development, and the New Partnership
for Africa's Development, an initiative by African leaders, to
establish a global effort for attaining sustainable development.
"Low- income countries will need to grow at 3.6 percent
per capita to meet the United Nations' Millennium Development
Goal of halving poverty by 2015, but this growth must be achieved
in a manner that preserves our future," said Ian Johnson,
Vice President of the World Bank's Environmentally and Socially
Sustainable Development Network. "It would be reckless of
us to successfully reach the Millennium Development Goals in 2015,
only to be confronted by dysfunctional cities, dwindling water
supplies, more inequality and conflict, and even less cropland
to sustain us than we have now."
The latest World Development Report (WDR 2003) stresses that
the burden of guaranteeing sustainable development must be shared
locally, nationally, and globally:
Developing countries need to promote participation and substantive
democracy, inclusiveness, and transparency as they build the institutions
needed to manage their resources.
Rich countries need to increase aid, cut poor country debts,
open their markets to developing country exporters, and help transfer
technologies needed to prevent diseases, increase energy efficiency,
and bolster agricultural productivity.
Civil society organizations contribute when they serve as a voice
for dispersed interests and provide independent verification of
public, private, and nongovernmental performance.
Private firms contribute when they commit to sustainability
in their daily operations and also create incentives to pursue
their interests while advancing environmental and social objectives.
"The world must act to help its poorest people manage their
own resources and build their productivity and incomes now, to
empower these communities and help them prepare for the demands
of the decades ahead," said Nicholas Stern, World Bank Chief
Economist and Senior Vice President. "Rich countries can
take such a step by opening their markets to developing world
exports and by abandoning agricultural subsidies and other barriers
to trade that depress prices and limit market opportunities for
the very goods that poor people produce most competitively."
The WDR 2003 estimates that the global population will reach
nine billion people by 2050 and stabilize by the end of the century
at 10 billion or less.
By mid-century, two-thirds of the world's population will live
in cities. The demands for energy, water, housing, and education
will be enormous.
Yet these trends also offer windows of opportunity, according
to the report. Most of the capital stock - apartments, shops,
factories, and roads - that will be needed by the growing population
in coming decades does not yet exist. Better standards, increased
efficiency, and new, more inclusive means of decision-making could
mean that this new capital stock could be built in ways that puts
fewer strains on society and the environment.
Similarly, as population growth slows, economic growth will translate
more readily into lower poverty and higher incomes per capita
- provided that economic and population growth over the next few
decades has been handled in a way that does not destroy the natural
resources that underpin growth or erode critical social values,
such as trust.
"The $140 trillion world of five decades time simply cannot
be sustained on current production and consumption patterns,"
Stern said. "A major transformation - beginning in the rich
countries - will be needed to ensure that poor people have an
opportunity to participate, and that the environment is not damaged
in a way that undermines their opportunities for the future."
Coordinating globally and acting locally will be critical to
ensuring that gains in social indicators - such as incomes, literacy
rates, or access to sanitation - of the past 20 years are not
reversed by population growth pressures and unsustainable economic
expansion.
"The goal for the World Summit in Johannesburg should be
to establish truly global alliances, with partners from all sectors,
that will transparently and fairly work towards ensuring that
development gains do not exhaust our environment and its resources
or threaten social upheaval because they exclude poor people,"
Johnson said. "In the quest to deliver a better life for
poor people, we must plan for better management of critical public
resources: water, energy, health, agriculture, and biodiversity."
The challenges are daunting. The average income in the richest
20 countries is already 37 times that in the poorest 20 nations.
Globally, 1.3 billion people live on fragile lands – arid
zones, slopes, wetlands, and forests – that cannot sustain
them. Both the gap between rich and poor countries and the number
of people living on fragile lands have doubled in the past 40
years.
Around half of the world's wetlands disappeared in the last century.
Water use is expected to jump 50 percent over the next 30 years,
and yet pollution and climate changes are already threatening
water supplies, particularly in Africa, the Middle East, and South
Asia. By 2025, it is likely that three quarters of the world's
population will live within 100 kilometers of the sea, placing
huge strains on coastal ecosystems.
Since the 1950s, nearly two million hectares of land worldwide
– representing 23 percent of all cropland, pastures, forest,
and woodland – have been degraded, and tropical forests
are disappearing at the rate of 5 percent per decade.
More than one third of terrestrial biodiversity is squeezed into
habitats that altogether represent just 1.4 percent of the Earth's
surface.
In the latest World Development Report, the World Bank notes
that the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 10 years ago did much
to heighten awareness of the policy challenges necessary to achieve
sustainable development. Since then, the need for more effective
local, national, and international institutions to design and
implement these policies has become increasingly evident, the
report says.
The 2003 report describes promising innovations around the globe
that address these problems. It argues for rich and developing
countries to build upon these efforts to make sustainable development
a reality and enable poor people to participate in economic growth.
"In the next 50 years, the world's population will begin
to stabilize, and the majority of people will live in cities for
the first time in history," said Zmarak Shalizi, lead author
of the WDR 2003. "By thinking long term and acting now, we
can take advantage of these windows of opportunity to shift development
to a more inclusive and sustainable path and achieve steep reductions
in poverty in the decades ahead."
The WDR 2003 suggests that sustainable development will require:
Achieving substantial growth in income and productivity in developing
countries.
Managing the social, economic, and environmental transitions to
a predominantly urban world.
Attending to the needs of hundreds of millions of people living
on environmentally fragile lands.
Reaping the "demographic dividends" seen in declining
dependency rates and slowing population growth.
And avoiding the social and environmental stresses¾at local
and global levels¾likely to emerge on the path to a $140
trillion world economy.
Across the developing world, new rules, organizations, and other
institutional innovations are already leading to better environmental
outcomes. Air pollution is declining in Mexico City and in some
Chinese cities. All but a handful of countries have eliminated
lead from gasoline. In the past 10 years, the percentage of people
in low- and middle-income countries with access to sanitation
has climbed to 52 percent, from 44 percent.
Countries as different as China, Morocco, and Cameroon are experimenting
with new institutional approaches to these problems, often involving
increased participation of the private sector and civil society.
In Brazil, for example, the government has made it possible for
poor people in some locales to secure title to their homes and
land, so that even those with only the barest means of shelter
feel confident they will not be evicted. With security of tenure,
even poor people are able to invest to improve their homes or
their businesses.
Most importantly, poor people must have a greater say in the
process that will shape their lives in the decades ahead. Decisions
need to be taken in an inclusive and consultative manner that
recognizes the views of poor people while also empowering them
with greater control of their own resources.
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UN Millennium Development Goals For 2015
Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Halve the proportion of people with less than one dollar
a day.
Halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger.
Achieve universal primary education
Ensure that boys and girls alike complete primary schooling.
Promote gender equality and empower women
Eliminate gender disparity at all levels of education.
Reduce child mortality
Reduce by two thirds the under-five mortality rate.
Improve maternal health
Reduce by three quarters the maternal mortality ratio.
Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases
Reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Ensure environmental sustainability
Integrate sustainable development into country policies
and reverse loss of environmental resources.
Halve the proportion of people without access to potable
water.
Significantly improve the lives of at least 100 million
slum dwellers.
Develop a global partnership for development
Raise official development assistance.
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Link to relevant site
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| Action on Agriculture
Developing countries depend on their agricultural
sectors for around one quarter of their total output.
However, farmers in these regions are faced with many
hurdles to boosting their living standards in the
years ahead.
Rich country subsidies depress agricultural prices
and stifle opportunities for exporters in the poorest
countries.
Poor roads, a scarcity of finance, lack of access
to new technologies, and growing environmental degradation
also threaten the livelihoods of poor farmers in many
parts of the world.
To help the poorest in the developing world rapidly
boost their incomes, the World Bank is urging rich
countries to stop spending $1 billion a day on agricultural
subsidies, to accelerate the transfer of new technologies,
and to provide more aid, particularly to Sub-Saharan
Africa, which is struggling to raise agricultural
productivity in the face of rapid population growth.

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Managing Water For All
The World Commission on Water estimates that water
use will jump 50 percent over the next 30 years.
As much as half the world's population - largely
in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia - will face
severe water shortages by 2025.
Effectively managing the world's water resources
and ensuring delivery to rapidly growing urban areas,
rural communities, and industries will increasingly
require internationally coordinated efforts.
Many developing countries will need to make sizeable
investments in water infrastructure. In the past,
inappropriate pricing policies have led to massive
waste and have not provided benefits to poor people,
who often lack access to water connections.
Water supply is an essential element in many other
poverty reduction efforts, such as nutrition, and
disease prevention programs.
Next week's summit in Johannesburg will consider
ways to ensure poor people have wider and continuous
access to clean water.


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| Managing Water For All
The World Commission on Water estimates that water
use will jump 50 percent over the next 30 years.
As much as half the world's population - largely
in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia - will face
severe water shortages by 2025.
Effectively managing the world's water resources
and ensuring delivery to rapidly growing urban areas,
rural communities, and industries will increasingly
require internationally coordinated efforts.
Many developing countries will need to make sizeable
investments in water infrastructure. In the past,
inappropriate pricing policies have led to massive
waste and have not provided benefits to poor people,
who often lack access to water connections.
Water supply is an essential element in many other
poverty reduction efforts, such as nutrition, and
disease prevention programs.
Next week's summit in Johannesburg will consider
ways to ensure poor people have wider and continuous
access to clean water.
 
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