| MDGs bound to fail because citizens are unaware of them
By Cheryl Hendricks --
Dr Cheryl Hendricks is the head of the Southern Africa Human Security Programme at the Institute for Security Studies, Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa
The United Nations’ Millennium Development Campaign
is built around the worldwide achievement of eight goals
and 18 targets by 2015, spanning the areas of poverty
reduction, health, education, gender equity, environmental
sustainability and global partnerships.
African countries have committed themselves to achieving
these Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). But this
will not be the first time. African countries have also
in the past acceded to several other international instruments
designed to achieve the same outcomes.
These include the International Convention on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights; the Copenhagen Declaration;
the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination
Against Women; the Beijing Platform for Action; and
the Dakar Framework for Action.
However, little domestication of these instruments
materialized.
The Millennium Development Campaign is said to be different
to these other policy initiatives because of three factors:
its global advocacy; the explicit incorporation of the
MDGs into national poverty reduction strategies, and
the regular monitoring thereof.
Moreover, the New African Partnership for Development
(NEPAD), billed as a ‘‘homegrown’’
African development framework, has also incorporated
the MDGs. Despite this, the early prognosis is that
sub-Saharan Africa will in all probability not meet
the MDG targets.
The results emanating so far from Southern Africa can
shed some light on why this may be the case.
Some Southern African countries, as per the current
trend, will meet most of the set targets, for example,
Botswana and Mauritius. Some will meet a fair number
of them, for example, South Africa. Those that will
meet very few are, for example, Angola, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Zambia, and Tanzania.
MDG targets where countries are faring better are those
to do with education and women’s representation.
Southern African countries have a comparatively high
primary school enrolment rate of between 70 and 95 percent.
Most countries have either been able to maintain primary
school enrolment rates or have increased them, bar South
Africa and Zimbabwe.
World Bank indicators show that primary school enrolment
rates for South Africa decreased from 92 percent in
1998 to 89 percent in 2004. South Africa has now introduced
a ‘‘no school fees’’ system
for schools in the poorest communities, which should
assist in rectifying the current trend.
Southern Africans, through the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), have also vigorously campaigned for
gender equity and for a 30 percent representation of
women in parliament. Most countries are still way below
the 30 percent mark, but there has been substantial
improvement in this regard.
For example, Namibia has increased gender representation
in parliament from 7 percent in 1990 to 26 percent in
2004. Similarly, South Africa has moved from 3 percent
in 1990 to 30 percent in 2004. Currently 21 percent
of Tanzania’s parliament consists of women.
There have been slight reversals in this trend in Botswana,
Madagascar and Malawi.
It is in the spheres of poverty reduction and health
that the majority of countries in the region fare dismally.
These two sectors constitute four of the eight MDGs.
The targets for MDG 1 on poverty reduction are to halve
both the proportion of people living on less than a
dollar a day and those who suffer from hunger during
the period 1990 to 2015.
Progress is extremely difficult to measure, as there
is a glaring lack of data in all countries for most
of this MDG’s indicators. Where data is available
it indicates that the poverty gap is increasing.
Regarding the state of health, the high prevalence
of HIV/AIDS in the region has taken its toll, most notably
in the alarming increase of the incidence of tuberculosis.
For example, Botswana shows an increase from 236 cases
per 100,000 people in 1990 to 670 per 100,000 people
in 2004. There is a doubling or tripling of figures
in all countries except Mauritius.
Infant and children under five mortality rates have
also increased, while maternal mortality ratios remain
high. These rates can be explained by a lack of access
to clean water and sanitation, relatively low immunization
rates as well as low rates of births attended by skilled
health professionals—areas mostly covered in the
MDGs.
Poverty can only be a partial explanation for the lack
of provision of services. The skewed distribution of
existing resources accounts for this scenario. The provision
of basic services is a fundamentally political issue.
It is here where the Millennium Development Campaign
as a whole misses the mark.
The campaign reduces the quest for poverty eradication
to a technical exercise in which governments are expected
to meet a limited set of criteria for which development
assistance will be increased. Any step on the way to
alleviate poverty can be deemed good.
However, challenging poverty and creating human security
requires a fundamental altering of power and structural
relations at both the national and the global level.
On this the MDGs are silent.
In the long term the development of Southern Africa
requires fundamental shifts in the international trade
and aid regimes, and in governance models. Southern
African countries remain exporters of primary goods
for which they have limited market access globally and
no control over price setting.
They remain heavily dependent on largely unpredictable
aid. Developed countries have also not delivered on
their official development aid commitments.
Compounding the situation are the induced shifts of
responsibility for service delivery from governments
to fragile markets. This has led to deterioration in
the living conditions of many.
Privatizing basic services and extracting user fees
may increase the possibility for access, but in reality
reduces the actual ability of poor people to utilize
these services.
Southern Africa can meet the MDG targets. Southern
Africa has the capacity to deliver on these demands.
Will they meet the MDGs? Given the current trajectory
many probably will not.
The MDGs are unlikely to be achieved without the citizens
of these countries actively challenging government policies,
practices and budgetary allocations. At present, few
are even aware of the campaign.
Striving to actualise development, without it being
foisted upon governments as yet another deliverable
in the good governance agenda, is the responsibility
of any government ruling on behalf of its citizens.
But the sad reality is that this has not been the case—hence
the MDG campaign.
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