Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Human developmen­t on course to decline this year for first time since 1990: UNDP

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Global human developmen­t, which can be measured as a combinatio­n of the world’s education, health and living standards, could decline this year for the first time since the concept was introduced in 1990, the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) warned, yesterday.

“The world has seen many crises over the past 30 years, including the Global Financial Crisis of 2007-09.

Each has hit human developmen­t hard but overall, developmen­t gains accrued globally year-on-year,” said UNDP Administra­tor Achim Steiner.

“COVID-19 – with its triple hit to health, education and income – may change this trend.”

Declines in fundamenta­l areas of human developmen­t are being felt across most countries - rich and poor - in every region.

COVID-19’S global death toll has exceeded 300,000 people, while the global per capita income this year is expected to fall by 4 percent.

With school closures, UNDP estimates of the “effective outof-school rate”—the percentage of primary school-age children, adjusted to reflect those without Internet access—indicate that 60 percent of children are not getting an education, leading to global levels not seen since the 1980s. The combined impact of these shocks could signify the largest reversal in human developmen­t on record.

This is not counting other significan­t effects, for instance, in the progress towards gender equality. The negative impacts on women and girls span economic - earning and saving less and greater job insecurity, reproducti­ve health, unpaid care work and gender-based violence.

The drop in human developmen­t is expected to be much higher in developing countries that are less able to cope with the pandemic’s social and economic fallout than the richer nations.

In education, with schools closed and stark divides in access to online learning, UNDP estimates show that 86 percent of children in primary education are now effectivel­y out-ofschool in countries with low human developmen­t—compared with just 20 percent in countries with very high human developmen­t. But with more equitable Internet access, where countries close the gap with leaders in their developmen­t group, something feasible – the current gaps in education could close.

Determined, equity-focused interventi­ons can help economies and societies rally, mitigating the far-reaching impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This crisis shows that if we fail to bring equity into the policy toolkit, many will fall further behind. This is particular­ly important for the ‘new necessitie­s’ of the 21st century, such as access to the Internet, which is helping us to benefit from tele-education, telemedici­ne and to work from home,” says UNDP Human Developmen­t Report Office Director Pedro Conceição.

Implementi­ng equity-focused approaches would be affordable. For instance, closing the gap in access to the Internet for low- and middle-income countries is estimated to cost just one percent of the extraordin­ary fiscal support packages the world has so far committed to respond to COVID-19.

The importance of equity is emphasised in the United Nations’ framework for the immediate socio-economic response to the COVID19 crisis, which sets out a green, gender-equal, good governance baseline from which to build a ‘new normal’.

It recommends five priority steps to tackle the complexity of this crisis: protecting health systems and services, ramping up social protection, protecting jobs, small- and medium-sized businesses and informal sector workers, making macroecono­mic policies work for everyone and promoting peace, good governance and trust to build social cohesion.

UNDP calls on the internatio­nal community to rapidly invest in the ability of developing countries to follow these steps.

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