Fairer Globalization Needed To Halve World’s Poor
Better Jobs, Fairer Globalization Needed To Halve
World’s Poor By 2015 – UN REPORT
With half the world's workers unable to earn enough to rise above the $2 a day poverty line, fairer globalization and better jobs are vital to achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving the number of global poor by 2015, according to a new report published today.
Of some 2.8
billion people employed globally in 2003 – more than ever
before – nearly 1.4 billion – also the highest number ever –
are living on less than $2 a day, with 500 million on less
than $1, although the actual percentage is lower today than
in 1990, the UN International Labour Office "The key to reducing the number of
working poor is creating decent and productive employment
opportunities and promoting a fairer globalization as
strategies for poverty reduction," ILO Director-General Juan
Somavia said. “It is not only the absence of work that is
the source of poverty, but the less productive nature of
that work. Productivity growth, after all, is the engine of
the economic growth that enables working men and women to
earn enough to lift themselves out of poverty." The
report calls for increasing productivity and earnings in
agriculture since a large share of workers in this sector
are informally employed and living in poverty. Agriculture
employs over 40 per cent of developing countries' workers
and contributes over 20 per cent of their gross domestic
product (GDP).
It notes that those regions that have
managed to increase productivity in the longer run and to
create job opportunities are more likely to be on track to
reach the MDG of halving poverty by 2015. There is a
chance to halve the global proportion of $1 a day working
poor by 2015 since the global annual GDP growth rate needed
would be 4.7 per cent, less than the 5 per cent rate
projected between 1995 and 2005. This projection is heavily
influenced by rapid growth in China, Southeast Asia and
South Asia. Transition economies and the Middle East and
North Africa should also meet the goal. But Latin America
and the Caribbean most likely will not and sub-Saharan
Africa is significantly off track. The outlook for
halving $2 a day working poverty, however, is less
promising. Only East Asia has a realistic chance, whereas
none of the other regions will succeed unless their GDP
growth rates increase considerably.