UN report calls for human development By Fu Jing (China Daily) Updated: 2005-09-09 05:53
China must take concrete measures to convert its economic miracles into
sustained progress in human development, according to a UN report released
yesterday.
China's economic advance has outpaced social progress, though it has made
rapid progress in offering basic education, medical and social security benefits
for its 1.3 billion population, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
said in the 2005 Human Development Report.
China is facing the challenge of ensuring that remarkable income growth is
converted into sustained progress in non-income dimensions of human development,
the UN organization said.
China is world's fastest growing economy over the past two decades, with per
capita incomes rising threefold.
Since 1990, the country has climbed 20 places in the Human Development Index
to rank 85.
"On behalf of the UNDP, I congratulate the Chinese Government and people once
again for this truly colossal achievement," said Khalid Malik, UN Resident
Co-ordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in China, at yesterday's launching
ceremony.
The report recognized China's massive achievements in poverty relief in the
past 30 years, saying that if it were not for China, the world would have
regressed in poverty alleviation.
However, the report asserted that "there are worrying indications that social
progress is starting to lag behind economic growth performance, with the
slowdown in the rate of reduction in child deaths a special concern," says the
report.
"Crippling low incomes, lack of access to health care and low education
prospects all plague the Chinese countryside," said Malik.
The report also points to the country's regional inequality. For example,
says the report, if Southwest China's Guizhou Province were a country, it would
rank just above Namibia, while East China's Shanghai Municipality would rank
alongside Portugal on the Human Development Index.
Released every year since 1990, the report provides an update on development
problems and solutions around the world, each time with a new theme.
This year's report examined the links between global aid, trade and security
policies in lifting the poorest out of extreme poverty.
"The world's highest trade barriers are erected against some of its poorest
countries," says the UN publication.
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