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Millennium Development Goals
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Things You Want To Know About MDG
What is MDG?
MDG
stands for Millennium Development Goals – a set of time-bound and measurable
goals and targets for combating poverty, hunger, diseases, illiteracy,
environmental degradation and discrimination against women. It consists of 8
goals, 18 targets and 48 indicators, covering the period 1990 to 2015
When and how did MDG start?
In
September 2000, member states of the United Nations (UN) gathered at the
Millennium Summit to affirm commitments towards reducing poverty and the
worst forms of human deprivation. The Summit adopted the UN Millennium
Declaration which embodies specific targets and milestones in eliminating
extreme poverty worldwide. A total of 189 countries, including the
Philippines committed themselves to making the right to development a
reality for everyone.
How can the UN member states achieve the MDGs?
For
most nations to achieve the MDGs, they must get not only additional
financial resources from both domestic and external sources, but should also
formulate policies and set up an institutional environment that will ensure
that the resources are used efficiently and effectively
Specifically, what are the MDGs?
The UN aims that by 2015,
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the proportion of people suffering from extreme poverty and hunger will be
halved;
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all children will be in primary school;
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girls will have the same educational opportunities as boys;
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the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water will be
halved;
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the spread of HIV/AIDS and malaria will be stopped;
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a
child’s risk of dying before the age of five will be reduced by
two-thirds;
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a
mother’s risk of dying while pregnant will be reduced by three quarters;
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the world’s ecosystem and biodiversity will be better protected from
destruction;
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at least 100 million slum dwellers will get better housing, health care,
and new opportunities for education;
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people in developing countries will have greater access to essential
drugs;
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the benefits of new technologies, especially information technologies,
will flow to more countries and more people; and
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wealthy countries will support developing countries with debt relief, more
financial aid, and greater market access.
How can the attainment
of the MDGs be measured?
The
attainment of the MDGs can be measured through a set of indicators defined
by the UN that will be able to assess progress over the period 1990 to 2015.
What efforts has the Philippines done to support the MDGs?
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The Philippines, as one of the signatories in the United Nations
Millennium Declaration has come up with the first Philippines Progress
Report on the Millennium Development Goals which not only defines where
the country is relative to the MDGs, but also outlines the challenges that
have to be overcome in order to attain these goals. The report was
prepared by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) through
the collaborative efforts of the Multi-sectoral Committee on International
Human Development Commitments (MC-IHDC) and the Social Development
Committee (SDC).
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To provide the data for monitoring of the country’s progress towards the
attainment of the MDGs, the National Statistical Coordination Board
(NSCB), as part of its participation in the Workshop on Development
Indicators held in Manila, Philippines in October 2001 and 2002 organized
by the UN Statistics Division (UNSD) through the "United Nations Project
on Strengthening Regional Capacities for Statistical Development in
Southeast Asia," has compiled the indicators and the corresponding data
series covering the period, 1990 to 2002, and these can be found at the
NSCB website,
http://www.nscb.gov.ph/stats/mdg/
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As part of the commitment of the NSCB to monitor the MDGs, the NSCB in
cooperation with various stakeholders of poverty statistics is organizing
the 2004 International Conference on Official Poverty Statistics:
Methodology and Comparability to be held in Manila, Philippines on October
4-6, 2004. The discussion and formulation of an integrated plan for the
regular compilation by the national statistical agencies of official
poverty statistics for the monitoring of the MDG to reduce poverty by half
by the year 2015 is one of the highlights of the Conference.
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