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Sub-Regional MDGR: Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia Ben Slay, Susanne Milcher UNDP Regional Centre, Bratislava 26 April 2004
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Why this presentation? n For EU accession, UNDP Regional Centre (Bratislava), national teams, prepared: –National MDGRs for four new EU states: n Czech Republic-- Hungary n Slovakia-- Slovenia –Sub-regional chapeau comparing results n Reports show how MDGRs adapted the MDGs in four new EU countries –Focus on how the national teams adapted MDGs to make them useful
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Report’s key messages n Adaption of MDGs to new EU countries requires disaggregation, by: –Ethnicity (Roma) –Sub-national regions –Gender –Labour market status n Adaptation shows that MDGs: –are useful even for developed countries –provide full picture of social exclusion –can complement tertiary EU social inclusion indicators
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Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger n Targets refocused on reducing relative poverty for vulnerable groups –Roma –Single mothers –Families with many children –Long-term unemployed n Large sub-national discrepancies magnify poverty risks for these groups
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Poverty and labour market status (Hungary, 2000) Poverty and labour market status (Hungary, 2000) Source: Gábos and Szivós (2002), on the basis of TÁRKI’s Household Monitor Note: Poverty line—50% of median household income (in consumption units)
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Single mothers below national subsistence minima (%) Source: CESES and UNDP, Millennium Development Goals Report, Czech Republic
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Low income rate after transfers (Hungary, 2000)
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Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education n National targets adapted to reflect Lisbon Summit’s “knowledge society”: –Life-long learning –Quality of education n Targets focused on: –Raising relatively low tertiary education levels –Better alignment of education systems with labour market needs
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Percentage of people with tertiary education (2000) Source: National statistical offices, EUROSTAT, 2003
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Roma education levels (2002) Source: UNDP/ILO survey (primary data), 2002 (http://roma.undp.sk/)
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Goal 3: Promote gender equality, empower women n Horizontal, vertical labour market segregation by gender apparent in all four countries –Women more likely to work in sectors with lower average wages, occupy lower positions in any given field n Reducing wage gaps featured prominently among targets selected
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Goal 4: Reduce child mortality n Substantial reductions in infant, perinatal mortality already achieved n Targets selected by national teams: –Hungary and Slovakia: reducing infant, child mortality levels toward EU averages –Czech Republic and Slovenia: maintaining child health, mortality levels at current favourable rates
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Infant mortality rates (2001)
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Goal 5: Improve maternal health n Maternal mortality, abortion rates have been declining for decades n Reports argue that further reductions in abortions should be sought, via the expansion of modern contraceptive methods
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Abortions per 1000 women (Slovakia, 2000)
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Teenage pregnancies (ages 12- 18), 2000
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Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, other diseases n Central European countries not threatened by AIDS, tuberculosis, or other infectious diseases... –... But a terrible HIV/AIDS epidemic is taking hold in Ukraine –Future threat? n Chronic circulatory ailments, cancers pose larger health threats in Central Europe than do infectious diseases
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TB prevalence (per 100K inhabitants, 2001)
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Death rates due to tumours (per 100,000 inhabitants) Males aged 0-64 Source: European health for all database, WHO
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Goal 7: Environmental sustainability n Substantial improvements in environmental quality since 1990 n But—Central Europe still faces environmental challenges: –Energy usage per unit of GDP remains well above OECD averages –Renewables: small role in energy balances –Requirement that municipalities with over 2,000 inhabitants must construct sewage treatment plants difficult to meet
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Goal 8: Global partnerships for development n ODA: Small but rising n Central European countries’ contribution to development cooperation goes well beyond the monetary value of their ODA –Their transition expertise, particularly for “new neighbours” in the CIS, Balkans
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Official Development Assistance (2001) Source: EC, The Consequences of Enlargement for Development Policy, Brussels, 2003
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Conclusion: MDGs useful for new EU states in 3 respects n Point to unfinished development agenda n Disaggregation, application builds capacity for designing, implementing: –Joint inclusion memoranda –National action plans n Underscore these countries’ important potential contributions to international development cooperation
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Thank you! UNDP Regional Center 35 Grosslingova Bratislava, Slovak Republic 81109 +421 2 59337 111 www.undp.sk http://mdgr.undp.sk
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