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Stat house
May 2005

Report says millions of U.S. uninsured skip needed treatment
Global poverty by the numbers

Global poverty by the numbers
The United Nation's Millennium Project compiled the information included below. The MP is an independent advisory body commissioned by the UN Secretary-General to advise the UN on strategies for achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the set of internationally agreed upon targets for reducing poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation and discrimination against women by 2015.

If the world achieves the project's goals, more than 500 million people will be lifted out of poverty. A further 250 million will no longer suffer from hunger, and 30 million children and two million mothers who might reasonably have been expected to die will be saved. So far the project is behind schedule and has not received the funding levels that member states from the industrialized world committed to. A key recommendation of the Project is that countries increase their foreign aid budgets to 0.7 percent of GDP. Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden have all reached the 0.7 commitment. Ireland, Belgium, France, Spain and the United Kingdom have each pledged to reach the goal by 2012. Though it has indicated a willingness to do more, the U.S. currently commits only about .15 of its GDP to overseas aid efforts.

Global poverty by the numbers:

More than one billion people in the world live on less than one dollar a day. Another 2.7 billion struggle to survive on less than two dollars per day. Poverty in the developing world, however, goes far beyond income poverty. It means having to walk more than one mile everyday simply to collect water and firewood; it means suffering diseases that were eradicated from rich countries decades ago. Every year eleven million children die—most under the age of five—from completely preventable causes like malaria, diarrhea and pneumonia.

In some deeply impoverished nations less than half of the children are in primary school and under 20 percent go to secondary school. Around the world, a total of 114 million children do not get even a basic education and 584 million women are illiterate.

Following are basic facts outlining the roots and manifestations of the poverty affecting more than one third of our world.

Health
Every year six million children die from malnutrition before their fifth birthday.

More than 50 percent of Africans suffer from water-related diseases such as cholera and infant diarrhea.

Everyday HIV/AIDS kills 6,000 people and another 8,200 people are infected with this deadly virus.

Every 30 seconds an African child dies of malaria-more than one million child deaths a year.

Each year, approximately 300 to 500 million people are infected with malaria. Approximately three million people die as a result.

TB is the leading AIDS-related killer and in some parts of Africa, 75 percent of people with HIV also have TB.

 

Hunger
More than 800 million people go to bed hungry every day...300 million are children.

Of these 300 million children, only eight percent are victims of famine or other emergency situations. More than 90 percent are suffering long-term malnourishment and micronutrient deficiency.

Every 3.6 seconds another person dies of starvation and the large majority are children under the age of 5.

 

Water
More than 2.6 billion people-over 40 per cent of the world's population-do not have basic sanitation, and more than one billion people still use unsafe sources of drinking water.

Four out of every ten people in the world don't have access even to a simple latrine.

Five million people, mostly children, die each year from water-borne diseases.

 

Agriculture
In 1960, Africa was a net exporter of food; today the continent imports one-third of its grain.

More than 40 percent of Africans do not even have the ability to obtain sufficient food on a day-today basis.

Declining soil fertility, land degradation, and the AIDS pandemic have led to a 23 percent decrease in food production per capita in the last 25 years even though population has increased dramatically.

For the African farmer, conventional fertilizers cost two to six times more than the world market price.

 

The devastating effect of poverty on women:

Above 80 percent of farmers in Africa are women.

More than 40 percent of women in Africa do not have access to basic education.

If a girl is educated for six years or more, as an adult her prenatal care, postnatal care and childbirth survival rates, will dramatically and consistently improve.

Educated mothers immunize their children 50 percent more often than mothers who are not educated.

AIDS spreads twice as quickly among uneducated girls than among girls that have even some schooling.

The children of a woman with five years of primary school education have a survival rate 40 percent higher than children of women with no education.

A woman living in sub-Saharan Africa has a 1 in 16 chance of dying in pregnancy. This compares with a 1 in 3,700 risk for a woman from North America.

Every minute, a woman somewhere dies in pregnancy or childbirth. This adds up to 1,400 women dying each day-an estimated 529,000 each year-from pregnancy-related causes.

Almost half of births in developing countries take place without the help of a skilled birth attendant.

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