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International-UN-NGOs
World leaders pledge to end poverty in 15 years
2015-09-26
The 17 goals and 169 targets aim to end poverty, ensure healthy lives, promote education and combat climate change, at a cost of between $3.5 and $5 trillion per year until 2030.
[AlAhram] World leaders on Friday pledged to end extreme poverty in 15 years, launching an ambitious UN development agenda that sets priorities for trillions of dollars in spending.

Critics say the goals lack precise definition and point to a history of grand pledges at the UN -- without necessarily following through on them..

The 17 goals and 169 targets aim to end poverty, ensure healthy lives, promote education and combat climate change, at a cost of between $3.5 and $5 trillion per year until 2030.

The new UN agenda will replace the millennium development goals (MDGs) that expire this year, but its objectives are much more ambitious in scope.

UN Secretary-General the ephemeral Ban Ki-moon described the plan as a "to-do list for people and planet" that laid out a "universal, integrated and transformative vision for a better world."

Contrary to the MDGs, the new global goals apply to both developing and developed countries and negotiations were opened up to governments and civil society, not only to UN experts.

Billions of dollars in development aid will be redirected to meet the targets but the United Nations
...a formerly good idea gone bad...
also wants to tap into local sources of financing through improved revenue collection.

The global goals call for improved transparency in oil-producing countries to clamp down on corruption and ensure that revenues from natural resources are used to improve the lives of citizens.

International financial institutions such as the African Development Bank and the World Bank will step up with financing support for major infrastructure projects that would have a knock-on effect in combating poverty.

Much attention has focused on ending extreme poverty for 836 million people still struggling on the margins of survival, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

The goals are non-binding, but the three-day summit that opened Friday at UN headquarters will allow leaders to publicly commit to achieving them.

Launched in 2012, negotiations on the new agenda sought to build on the success of the MDGs, which have helped reduce poverty rates while setting education and health targets, in particular for infant mortality.

But the new goals have come under criticism for being ill-defined in some instances and far too broad in scope, undermining prospects for achieving measurable success.

The United Nations is planning to roll out 300 indicators to measure progress by countries towards achieving the new goals and provide data on how governments are working to improve the lives of their citizens.

"The key missing ingredient is political will," said Jamie Drummond, executive director for global strategy at the ONE campaign. "We have a great history of promise-making at the UN, but the question is whether the promise is ever kept."
Posted by:trailing wife

#13  Here is a solution to poverty: compute the median wealth of the world. For everyone who has more than that, seize the amount of excess and give it to everyone who has less than the median. That way, everyone will have exactly the same. This will end poverty, since everyone will be identically rich (or poor, depending on your point of view).

I didn't say that it was a GOOD plan.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia    2015-09-26 23:14  

#12  Ted Talks...

I watched part of a Ted Talk the other day where some professor was suggestion we can end poverty by simply printing more money and giving it to the poor..

And he was taken seriously...

I think he was some professor in economics...
Posted by: CrazyFool   2015-09-26 22:03  

#11  "The poor you will always have with you"

Matthew 26:11

Yup.
Posted by: Barbara   2015-09-26 20:45  

#10  About ten years ago I went to Bangalore, India. I saw people living in corrugated metal shacks, that were next to a stream that was an open sewer. To those people, "poor" people in America are incredibly wealthy. Yet, liberals decry poverty in America.

As no mor uro pointed out, unless everyone has exactly the same wealth, there will always be poverty.
Posted by: Rambler in Viginia   2015-09-26 19:02  

#9  17 goals and 169 targets

A bureaucrat's delight! We'll be eating shrimp cocktail for decades. Call a meeting, Smedley!

Interested in actual solutions? A rare gem amongst TED Talks (they tend towards hipster douchery) is this one by Niall Ferguson on the Six Killer Apps of Prosperity which explains why the West is doing so well. (no doubt you have noticed flocks of refugee/migrants streaming in a particular direction)

"He suggests half a dozen big ideas from Western culture — call them the 6 killer apps — that promote wealth, stability and innovation."

The unmentioned problem is that your Operating System (AKA your culture/society) may need an upgrade to be capable of running these apps.
Posted by: SteveS   2015-09-26 16:18  

#8  ReDefine poverty.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2015-09-26 15:47  

#7  They have also pledged to power our electric flying cars on unicorn farts and to train monkey butlers to serve us margaritas while we enjoy a minimum wage of $10,000/hr.

Then they started ranting about alien bases on the moon and CIA plots to raise the aliens' property taxes. And then it got weird.
Posted by: Iblis   2015-09-26 15:11  

#6  World leaders pledge to end poverty in 15 years

And they always will.
Posted by: charger   2015-09-26 12:52  

#5  "Daar sal altyd arm mense in die land wees."

[There shall always be poor people in the land.]

Written a while back as I recall, and yet to be disproved. The facts will never stop lads like Ki-moon however. Poverty is an enterprise and a very profitable one at that.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-09-26 07:18  

#4  1. You'll never end poverty. Personality archetypes are what they are. Some people won't work unless it's the only way to prevent starvation. Some people won't work EVEN IF it's the only way to prevent starvation. Simply giving money to these types will insure that they do not work. They will therefore be unproductive and not generate the money needed to have a society that will give money in the first place.

2. Define poverty as a lowest percentage and poverty will always exist unless everybody is made the same by "hatchet, axe, and saw", to quote Peart. Poverty must be defined by a specific number, not by how people are doing relative to the general population. This leads to having a dishonest notion of what "poor" means. It also pushes people to engage in notions of relative deprivation, instead of being honest about their level of material comfort.

3, Every society which has ever attempted to end poverty by massive government intervention has been a total failure. Every society which tries to end poverty by massive government intervention ends up being a brutal crusher of inalienable rights and liberties. There have been no exceptions to this, because that impulse is flawed, evil, and cannot be made to work, no matter who is in charge.
Posted by: no mo uro   2015-09-26 05:10  

#3  Define poverty.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2015-09-26 04:00  

#2  Get rid of all the socialist/communist countries in favor of capitalism and you'll end poverty. There is no other way. No other system creates wealth, they all suck it up.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2015-09-26 02:38  

#1  "The key missing ingredient is political will," said Jamie Drummond, executive director for global strategy

And money. Lots and lots and lots of money. We will need a global U.N. Tax! It's for the Children!
Posted by: CrazyFool   2015-09-26 01:33  

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