| What are the MDGs? |
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What are the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and why are they important? At the close of the 20th century, governments around the world agreed on a set of common goals for developing countries, known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). These goals pave the way forward, from this moment to the year 2015, to cut world poverty by half. With the accomplishment of these goals, billions more people can benefit from the global economy. Tens of millions of lives can be saved.
The goals also provide a framework for the entire United Nations system to work with developing countries together toward a common end – making sure that globalization becomes a positive force for all of the world's people. The MDGs are the most broadly supported, comprehensive, and specific poverty reduction targets the world has ever established. For the international political system, they are the platform on which development policy is based. For the billion-plus people still living in extreme poverty, the MDGs are a life-and-death issue. These Goals are the means to a healthy, productive life. How will the world look in 2015 if the Goals are achieved? Compared with the year 2000, when the MDGs were inaugurated, more than 500 million people will be lifted out of extreme poverty. More than 300 million will no longer suffer from hunger. There will be dramatic progress in children’s health. Rather than dying before reaching their fifth birthdays, 30 million children will live. And the lives of two million mothers will be saved. There’s more: achieving the Goals will mean 350 million more people will have safe drinking water and 650 million more people live with the benefits of basic sanitation, allowing them to lead healthier and more dignified lives. Hundreds of millions more women and girls will go to school, have access to economic and political opportunity, and have greater security and safety. Behind these large numbers are the lives and hopes of people seeking new opportunities to end the burden of grinding poverty and to contribute to economic growth and renewal in their respective countries. |
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| Last Updated ( Tuesday, 11 March 2008 ) | |||||||||


