Transcript Slide 1

A post-2015 development
framework
Lars Engberg-Pedersen
Senior researcher
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
The strength of the MDGs
 Focus on poverty reduction and well-being
 A limited set of simple goals
 Focus on outcome, not input
 Focus on objectives, not means
 Goals supplied with indicators enabling
annual monitoring
 Good time frame, not too long, not too
short
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
The weaknesses of the MDGs
 Too much focus on developing countries,
too little on rich countries
 Too strong focus on social aspects of life,
too little on employment and production
 Too little concern with the political
dimensions of poverty
 Too little concern with inequality
 Irrelevant in many country contexts
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Current global changes
 Poverty is increasingly a result of international
processes (climate change, rising food and fuel prices,
financial crisis…)
 A chaotic ‘aid architecture’
 Heterogeneous development paths
 75% of the world’s poor live in middle income
countries
 Changes in the balance of global power due to rising
‘emerging economies’, economic crisis, aging
populations in rich countries, etc.
 Aid resources are dwarfed by other financial flows (FDI,
remittances, philanthropy, illicit capital flows, etc.)
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Current contentious issues
 Inequality or ‘getting to zero’
 Climate change and development
 Global or universal goals
 Ends and/or means
 Financing
 A changing world
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Inequality in the post-2015 framework
 Gender equality – probably yes
 Social protection floors – yes
 Measurement of progress among the
poorest – yes
 Stand-alone goal on reduced inequality – not
likely
– A possibility is to use the Palma ratio dividing
the income of the top 10% with the income of
the bottom 40%
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Possible goal: Halving the Palma ratio
Country
Palma ratio 2010
Baseline
Palma ratio 2030
Target
Bolivia (2008)
4.847
2.924
Brazil (2009)
4.302
2.651
Bulgaria (2007)
0.997
-
Burkina Faso (2009)
1.859
1.430
China (2005)
2.154
1.577
Denmark (1997)
0.922
-
France (1995)
1.267
1.134
Germany (2000)
0.992
-
Ghana (2005)
2.172
1.586
India (2004)
1.355
1.178
Japan (1993)
0.875
-
Malaysia (2009)
2.627
1.814
Netherlands (1999)
1.094
1.047
South Africa (2008)
7.052
4.026
Tanzania (2007)
1.653
1.327
United Kingdom (1999)
United States (2000)
1.623
1.852
1.312
1.426
DIIS ∙ DANISH INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES