The
recently published Human Development Report 2003 (HDR
2003) stresses on the need for countries, both developed
and developing, to play their roles in order to meet
the Millennium Development Goals adopted at the UN
Millennium Summit in September 2000 and end human
poverty. In fact this report has more credence than
the World Development Report, brought out by the World
Bank. The HDR, an annual ritual of the UNDP, appears
to have a focus more oriented towards improving the
actual conditions of the world's population,
especially in developing countries. However, its adherence
to the belief that globalization, the way it is spreading
today, is the panacea of all miseries plaguing the
poor people and countries nips any possibility of
this report departing radically from mainstream economic
orthodoxy in the bud.
The HDR 2003, titled 'Millennium Development
Goals: A compact among nations to end human poverty'
flatters only to deceive. The report still bases all
hopes of alleviating miseries of poor countries on
the largesse of the rich. The Millennium Development
Goals on which the HDR 2003 hinges the progress of
poorer countries are listed below:
Eradicate extreme poverty and
hunger
• Reduce by half the proportion of people living
on less than a dollar a day
• Reduce by half the proportion of people who
suffer from hunger
Achieve universal primary education
• Ensure that all boys and girls complete a
full course of primary schooling
Promote gender equality and
empower women
• Eliminate gender disparity in primary and
secondary education preferably by 2005, and at all
levels by 2015
Reduce child mortality
• Reduce by two thirds the mortality rate among
children under five
Improve maternal health
• Reduce by three quarters the maternal mortality
ratio
Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and
other diseases
• Halt and begin to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS
• Halt and begin to reverse the incidence of
malaria and other major diseases
Ensure environmental sustainability
• Integrate the principles of sustainable development
into country policies and programmes; reverse loss
of environmental resources
• Reduce by half the proportion of people without
sustainable access to safe drinking water
• Achieve significant improvement in lives of
at least 100 million slum dwellers, by 2020
Develop a global partnership
for development
• Develop further an open trading and financial
system that is rule-based, predictable and non-discriminatory.
Includes a commitment to good governance, development
and poverty reduction-nationally and internationally
• Address the least developed countries'
special needs. This includes tariff- and quota-free
access for their exports; enhanced debt relief for
heavily indebted poor countries; cancellation of official
bilateral debt; and more generous official development
assistance for countries committed to poverty reduction
• Address the special needs of landlocked and
small island developing States
• Deal comprehensively with developing countries'
debt problems through national and international measures
to make debt sustainable in the long term
• In cooperation with the developing countries,
develop decent and productive work for youth
• In cooperation with pharmaceutical companies,
provide access to affordable essential drugs in developing
countries
• In cooperation with the private sector, make
available the benefits of new technologies-especially
information and communications technologies
What is disturbing in the goals mentioned above is
that while almost all of the first seven targets,
the onus of meeting which is on the countries in crisis,
have target periods, the steps that the rich countries
have to take in order to make the effort a success
do not have any time frame. While the HDR makes a
plea to the advanced countries and the private sector
to set their own time frames, such pleas are bound
to fall on deaf ears. The report itself mentions that
the aid target of 0.7 per cent of the gross national
income of developed countries had been set in 1970,
and even today aid flow is nowhere near the target.
That 33 years later the same target has to be reiterated,
speaks volumes about the level of commitment in the
North to the fight for eradication of global poverty.
Given this situation it is useless to have the same
set of goals for the developing world hoping that
the aid necessary to meet these goals would suddenly
start flowing.
The report, in many places, speaks of the need for
greater resource generation from within the developing
countries themselves. But the report hardly suggests
ways as to how this can be accomplished. The only
thing it suggests is good governance, implying that
lack of governance is the prime cause for inadequate
resource generation from within the countries in question.
While corruption seems to cause much misery to the
poor in the developing world, the scenario in developed
countries is no better. Accounting malpractices have
become the norm rather than the exception. However,
while the donors have always looked at corruption
in public offices and imposed governance related conditionalities
on the borrowing governments, they have let the private
sector go scot-free. But the HDR 2003 also exhibits
a similar tendency, under the implicit belief that
private players would be free from corruption.
The report, in several places, contradicts what it
says somewhere else. It focuses on increasing democratization
of the economies and of the way in which governments
function in these economies. However, the report seems
to confuse between democratization (and decentralization)
of government activities and reduction of state control.
If anything, the withdrawal of the state, making way
for the private players, will reduce the control democratic
processes used to have over policy decisions that
are critical in shaping people's social and material
lives. People across the world will witness disempowerment
with this process being aided and abetted by the forces
of liberalization, deregulation and globalization.
The HDR 2003 also considers the Poverty Reduction
Strategy Papers (PRSPs) as a framework that moves
'poverty reduction closer to the centre of development
strategies'. The only criticism the report has
for PRSPs is that they ask the countries to prepare
the papers keeping in mind the various constraints
their economies are faced with. The HDR 2003 argues
that it should not be the case, particularly as far
as the financial and market access constraints are
concerned, and the developed world should give more
aid and open their markets to products from developing
countries.
While the increased donor assistance and market access
would of course be welcomed by developing countries,
lack of these are not the only deficiencies PRSPs
suffer from. The PRSPs are supposed to be produced
by the respective countries in consultation with civil
societies to reflect what the countries need. However,
in reality, the PRSPs look like documents written
to satisfy the demands of donor agencies and countries,
suggesting macroeconomic packages detrimental to the
interest of the developing countries. While these
packages are obsessed with bringing inflation down,
for many of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs),
most of them in Africa, inflation today is hardly
a concern. The world today is rather in a deflationary
stage. But because the donors believe that inflation
is the worst thing that may happen, conservative monetary
policy has to be pursued by African nations. Besides,
PRSPs are also obsessed with the view that controlling
public expenditure is the only route to fiscal discipline.
And the HDR 2003 does not mention these irrationalities
widely prevalent in PRSPs.
The report has also repeatedly cited the International
Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey
held at Monterrey in March 2002 as some sort of a
milestone which 'reaffirmed the world's
commitment to the Millennium Declaration and its development
targets'. The HDR has said:
The conference advanced new terms for a global partnership
based on mutual responsibilities between developing
and rich countries. It also reaffirmed the primary
responsibility of national governments for mobilizing
domestic resources and improving governance-including
sound economic policies and solid democratic institutions.
And it reaffirmed commitments by rich countries to
work towards a supportive international environment
and increased financing for development. (P41)
However, the 'Monterrey Consensus' that
was tabled at Monterrey would hardly mitigate the
miseries of those reeling under poverty. The Consensus
was long on intentions, but hardly included quantifiable
goals or deadlines. It focused more on the issue of
how much aid rich countries should provide poor countries,
that too if the aid seekers exhibit "good governance",
solid economic policies and legal structures needed
to encourage free trade, etc. Issues like debt relief,
historically-generated structural constraints on development
and global policies in areas like health and education
were hardly addressed. If this consensus is considered
to be a landmark then the millennium goals cannot
ever be achieved.
The HDR 2003 comments that globalization has bypassed
several countries and regions and hence these regions
and countries have remained poor or their economic
conditions have deteriorated. Many small countries,
despite opening up, have found out that no international
firm has shown any interest to invest in production
for small domestic markets. To quote from the report:
But just as globalization has systematically benefited
some of the world's regions, it has bypassed
others as well as many groups within countries. (P
29)
However, nothing can be further away from truth. More
often than not countries which are today in crisis
would have been better off if globalization did actually
bypass them. Their economic misery has been a result
of globalization affecting them adversely rather than
owing to the process of globalization bypassing them.
Those who have benefited from the process have done
so at the expense of the countries whose economies
have seen a downturn. The process called globalization
has facilitated capital and resource flights from
the countries adversely affected to those where people
have gained.
The HDR 2003 has listed countries where hunger and
child mortality have risen during the 1990s. The report
mostly attributes such failure to economic stagnation
and non-performance of the countries concerned. However,
in many countries these increases have been caused
to a great extent by the economic and other sanctions
imposed by the UN (in Iraq), or the US (in Cuba).
But such causation finds no mention in the report.
Overall the Human Development Report 2003 turns out
to be a huge disappointment. It fails to condemn the
market forces for the miseries that such forces have
thrust upon the masses in poor developing countries.
Rather it states that the way these developing countries
can benefit is through spread of globalization in
these countries as well. While agreeing that the causation
is not automatic, the report argues that economic
growth is essential for reducing poverty.
Seldom if ever is income poverty reduced in a stagnant
economy, and the regions growing fastest economically
are also the ones that have reduced income poverty
most. That provides a clear message: economic growth
is essential for reducing income poverty. (P 40)
However, things can easily work out the other way
round as well. And in fact it is bound to work better
the other way in economies facing a demand constraint.
A redistribution (through taxing the rich and giving
it to the poor) can in fact generate lot more demand
for goods and services than if the money remained
with the rich. This is a phenomenon accepted even
by mainstream economists, as marginal propensity to
consume is lower at higher levels of income. Also
goods and services demanded by the poor are more likely
to be locally produced in contrast to the demand generated
by the rich, which mostly has a high if not absolute
import content. Demand for locally producible goods
and services does not stretch the need for foreign
exchange, create employment, and thus additional demand
from those newly recruited. Thus more money in the
hands of the poor has a greater multiplier effect
on the domestic economy. But the HDR 2003 overlooks
this fact. It states that almost no country has seen
a reduction in poverty preceding a rise in growth
rates. However, it is simply because the economic
orthodoxy of the donors in today's world does
not leave any space for receiving countries to go
in for income redistribution.
What is regrettable is the fact that even the HDR
2003 fails to challenge this orthodoxy in economic
thinking. This orthodoxy and devotion to supply-side
economics runs through the report till the end. In
the last paragraph the report states:
The global economic slowdown also threatens to undermine
rich country action for development as their own economies
come under pressure to reduce budget deficits and
press home their own trading advantages. (P 162)
However, it is actually during slowdowns that economies
need to boost spending and a reduction in budget deficit
is not desirable at that point of time. And indeed
the United States, the preacher of these orthodox
policies worldwide, itself seems not to practice what
it preaches. It is another matter that the US, instead
of increasing government expenditure, gives tax sops
to the super rich hoping that this will lead to an
increase in demand. A much better way to ensure an
economic reversal would have been to use the taxes
to raise government expenditure in sectors which would
have a greater multiplier effect in boosting demand
and employment, and to ensure similar expansion outside
the US through increased aid flows and imports.
As long as the economists involved in the preparation
of the Human Development Report do not give up their
faith in neo-liberal policies, nothing substantial
that might alleviate the miseries of the poor countries
is going to come out of such reports. It might initially
generate in the developing world some hopes for a
better future, but such hopes are not going to last
long. One can say, as in previous years, this year's
Human Development Report flatters to deceive.
August 04, 2003.
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