Riots in Lhasa
Text Version
RSS Feeds
Newsletter
Home Forum Photos Features Newsletter Archive Employment
About US Help Site Map
SEARCH   About US FAQ Site Map Site News
  SERVICES
  -Text Version
  -RSS Feeds
  -Newsletter
  -News Archive
  -Give us feedback
  -Voices of Readers
  -Online community
  -China Biz info
  What's new
 -
 -
UN: Poverty eradication slows in Asia-Pacific
+ -
15:04, March 28, 2008

 Related News
 About 17% of children in U.S. living in poverty
 Anti-poverty group donates $5 mln to snow disaster areas
 China cuts poverty-stricken population by half ahead of schedule
 China's experience shores up WB's leading role in poverty reduction
 China's poverty elimination sets a model for the world
 Comment  Tell A Friend
 Print Format  Save Article
The rate at which poverty is falling across the Asia-Pacific region is slowing despite a burst of largely urban wealth creation, a United Nations report said yesterday, blaming the setback on a neglect of agriculture.

It argued that raising farm labor productivity and liberalizing global trade in agricultural products could lift more than 250 million Asians out of poverty.

Farming still supports almost 60 percent of population in the Asia-Pacific region, the report said, and generates a quarter of its gross domestic product.

But, unlike in the 1970s and 1980s when the expansion of value-added agricultural activity played the largest role in poverty reduction in Asia, the beneficial impact of the sector is on the wane.

"Agriculture's lethargy has broken agricultural growth's historically strong contribution to reducing poverty," the UN's Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific said in its annual report.

Falling subsidies in some countries, rising input costs and pressure on land from industry have all contributed to the downturn, it said.

Two of the world's fastest growing economies, India and China, are still plagued by stubbornly high rural poverty despite increasingly affluent cities, the report said.

In China, half the aggregate decline in village impoverishment was in the first half of the 1980s. In India only 6 million people living in rural areas were taken out of poverty after 1999, a period of rapid economic growth, it added.

In South Asia, urban and rural poverty each fell by a meager 7 percent during 1993-2002.

Comparatively, East Asia and the Pacific fared better with urban poverty falling by almost 50 percent and rural poverty by 44 percent.

"Growth has been concentrated in cities and regions where infrastructure and basic service delivery are superior," the report said.

Source: China Daily/Agencies




  Your Message:   Most Commented:

|About Peopledaily.com.cn | Advertise on site | Contact us | Site map | Job offer|
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90856/6382782.pdf