12-19-05, 10:06 am
IN the year 2000, the UN General Assembly adopted the Millennium Declaration, in which world leaders committed to achieving a set of eight goals by 2015. Since then, these Millennium Development Goals, or MDGs, have become the latest buzzword at different levels of the international development aid industry, and have spawned substantial employment generation for what are now called 'development practitioners.' WELL INTENTIONED MDGS & FREE MARKET ORIENTED POLICIES The MDGs are certainly worthy and well-intentioned, stating goals that no sane person could really object to. They are: to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; to achieve universal primary education; to promote gender equality and empowerment of women; to reduce child mortality; to improve maternal health; to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases; to ensure environment sustainability; and to develop a global partnership for development. All this was supposed to happen through a combination of more international aid and policy changes within developing countries. The trouble is that the policies that were suggested typically involved more of the free-market-obsessed deregulation that has already created employment stagnation and greater income inequalities in most of the world. But while there have been several critiques of the policy orientation implicit in the entire exercise (for example by Focus in the Global South) there has been relatively little in terms of either assessments on the ground or presentation of the perceptions of the people who are supposed to be benefited by it. AN EYE OPENER REPORT That is why a new report by Action Aid International, entitled Whose Freedom? (published in September 2005) is quite an eye-opener. This report is based on interviews with more than 350,000 people from 5,000 villages in 19 poor developing countries over the months of June, July and August this year. It presents a stark and graphic picture of the continuing hardship faced by ordinary people in these countries, more than five years after the MDGs were first adopted. The countries are: Afghanistan, Nepal, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Vietnam, Ethiopia, Senegal, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Kenya, Tanzania, Somalia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Burundi, Brazil and Guatemala. The agrarian crisis afflicting most of the developing world is reflected in the evidence especially from small and marginal farmers in the survey. With small and marginal farmers unable to eke out a livelihood from their plots, there was a widespread pattern to recourse to casual and insecure wage labour to make ends meet. Yet there are simply not enough jobs to meet this growing demand — people in 87 per cent of the villages reported that work was not available regularly when needed, and in 50 per cent of the villages paid work was available for only half the month the most. SHOCKING REPORTS ON AGRICULTURAL FRONT This has affected food intake. Hunger deaths were reported from 24 per cent of the villages, and people from 64 per cent of the villages said they were forced to skip meals, either regularly or in particular seasons. Public systems of social protection were found to be minimal: people in 47 per cent of the villages had no access to any public service in any season. In fact only 21 per cent of the villages offered a public distribution system for food. In periods of drought or shortage, only 15 per cent of villages reported any form of drought relief, such as food for work, cash or other transfers.From People's Democracy