Public not private – the key to ending global poverty
Classrooms with teachers, clinics with nurses, running taps and working toilets: these basic public services are key to ending global poverty, according to a new report from Oxfam and WaterAid. And, the agencies say, only governments are in a position to deliver them on the scale needed to transform the lives of millions living in poverty.
The report, "In the Public Interest," calls on developing country governments to devote a greater proportion of their budgets to building these vital services for their citizens – and for rich countries to support their plans with increased, long-term aid commitment.
“Building up public services in poor countries is key to making poverty history,” said Oxfam’s Bernice Romero, Advocacy and Campaigns Director. “What greater investment could there be than paying for the training and salaries of teachers and health workers, or developing national water and sanitation systems?”
Rich countries and the World Bank come under fire for undermining governments’ ability to deliver public services by pushing inappropriate private sector projects in water provision and health. The report acknowledges that the private sector has a role to play, along with charities and faith groups, but argues they cannot provide services on the necessary scale, geared to the needs of all citizens, including women and girls, minorities and the very poorest.
The report argues that universal public services were the basis for today’s prosperity in rich countries.
“A hundred years ago, life expectancies in Europe weren’t so very different from modern-day Africa,” said Bernice Romero. “It was only through strong government-led programs that we tackled disease and created an educated workforce, laying the foundations for the level of wealth we enjoy today.”
While acknowledging the challenges of weak government systems in many countries, the agencies highlight recent successes. Sri Lanka, Botswana, Malaysia and Kerala state in India have, within a generation, made health and education advances that took industrialized countries more than a century to achieve.
In spite of being a poor country with a third of people living on less than two dollars a day, Sri Lanka provides free health care and education to its citizens. It has one of the world’s lowest rates of women dying in childbirth.
“There are over a billion people living without access to clean, safe water and 2.6 billion people have nowhere to go to the toilet,” said Belinda Calaguas, WaterAid’s Head of Policy. “This leads to the inevitable spread of water-related diseases which claim the lives of 6,000 children every day. This is a growing crisis for some of the poorest countries in the world and the answer lies in massive public sector reform supported by rich country governments.”
Every day around the world 4,000 children are killed by diarrhea, 1,400 women die needlessly in pregnancy or childbirth and 100 million school-age children, most of them girls, will not go to school. Yet rich countries still spend almost as much on pet food ($40billion) as the $47 billion a year it would cost to meet the Millennium Development Goals on health, education, water and sanitation.
“Within a generation, for the first time in history, every child in the world could be in school, every woman could give birth with proper health care, everyone could drink clean, safe water, and millions of new health workers and teachers could be saving lives and shaping minds. We should accept nothing less,” said Oxfam’s Bernice Romero.
Contact Information
For further information, please contact:
Taylor Thompson, Media Officer, Oxfam International,
taylor.thompson@oxfaminternational.org,
+1 202 321 2967
Join Grow
-
RT @OxfamIreland: Ireland pledges €2.5 million in aid to Mali to contribute to reconstruction http://t.co/wvUzsRsHoD via @IrishTimes #Mal…5 hours 9 min ago
-
As @UN Disaster Risk Reduction Conference ends, worth checking #GPDRR13 for great tweets from @unisdr @UNOCHA @Federation et al5 hours 40 min ago
-
RT @UNOCHA: Only 3% of all #humanitarian aid was allocated towards disaster prevention & preparedness measures in 2012 - http://t.co/cT0OwU…5 hours 44 min ago
-
As food scandals hit the headlines, is food safety a casualty of today’s high & volatile #foodprices? http://t.co/Yuh7N0RUtN6 hours 10 min ago
-
RT @OxfamAmerica: Our deepest sympathies to @DivineChocolate on the loss of Christiana Ohene-Agyare, Pres. of Kuapa Kokoo in #Ghana http://…7 hours 3 min ago
-
What success at the #G8 would look like: 'We’ll stop hurting our brothers & sisters' http://t.co/yjtQNoc64W #land #taxjustice7 hours 59 min ago
-
Ban Ki-moon's visit to Goma, #DRC welcomed following new explosion of violence, but its causes need to be addressed http://t.co/2wATHBmLrm8 hours 55 min ago
-
Why is Russia still arming #Syria? Interesting @NYTimes editorial http://t.co/mDrecVJf4v #oil #NYT #SyriaCrisis9 hours 43 min ago
-
Oops, correct link here to press release: ‘Squeezed’: how poor ppl are adjusting to rising #foodprices http://t.co/lgDXW3bjK010 hours 8 min ago
-
#EU leaders back the interests of an elite minority, fail to clamp down on #taxdodging http://t.co/VNbvkyMmyG @OxfamEU10 hours 23 min ago
-
RT @louis_press: Lebanon saw an increase of 12% of its population (500.000) w/ #refugees from #Syria = As if 7.5m would enter Great Britain…11 hours 40 min ago
-
RT @louis_press: Untold story of #syria war is the incredible generosity + hospitality of ppl of #Lebanon #Jordan #Iraq. Despite tensions, …11 hours 58 min ago
-
More than 80,000 people have been killed & several million displaced since the #SyriaCrisis began http://t.co/WYbyDUytmX #Syria12 hours 8 min ago
-
Delayed weddings & funerals: Today’s high #foodprices are exacting a deep social cost on poor people http://t.co/eUru4L7Y7813 hours 11 min ago
-
Risky jobs & domestic violence = the social cost of today’s high #foodprices http://t.co/UFZRYFYWqi new Oxfam & @IDS_UK report14 hours 42 min ago

