MINISTRY OF STATISTICS & PROGRAMME IMPLEMENTATION
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
Dated the 13th February 2006
PRESS NOTE – 3/2006
MILLENNIUM
DEVELOPMENT GOALS (MDGs) -
INDIA COUNTRY REPORT-2005 RELEASED
Shri G. K. Vasan, Minister of State (independent charge), Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, released the first Millennium Development Goals - India Country Report for the year 2005 on 13th February 2006 in a simple function at Delhi. The Millennium Declaration adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in September 2000 reaffirmed its commitment to the right to development, peace, security and gender equality, to the eradication of many dimensions of poverty and to overall sustainable development. These are intended for the Member Countries to take efforts in the fight against poverty, illiteracy, hunger, lack of education, gender inequality, infant and maternal mortality, disease and environmental degradation. The Millennium Declaration adopted 8 development goals, 18 time-bound targets and 48 indicators.
2. The Millennium Development Goals are:
MDG
1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger;
MDG 2: Achieve universal primary education;
MDG 3: Promote gender equality
and empower women;
MDG 4: Reduce child mortality;
MDG 5: Improve maternal health;
MDG 6: Combat HIV/ AIDS,
malaria and other diseases;
MDG 7: Ensure environmental
sustainability; and
MDG 8: Develop a global partnership for development.
3. This First
Country Report on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) captures India’s
achievements, challenges and policies with reference to the goals and targets
and reveals that there have been substantial improvements in the
lives of people of the countries over the years. This has been possible due to
the planned implementation of programmes despite the enormous and complex
problems and diversities of our nation. The Central and State Governments have
set up goals more ambitious than the MDGs. With the well thought out planning,
comprehensive development strategies devised in the national policy, and
matching implementation process, it is hoped that India will be able to meet
the challenges and achieve all the MDG targets much earlier than the targeted
dates.
4. India’s
position with reference to the various Goals is given below:
(i)
To
achieve the Goal of eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, India must reduce
by 2015 the proportion of people below poverty line from nearly 37.5 percent in
1990 to about 18.75 percent. As on
1999-2000, the poverty headcount ratio is 26.1 percent with poverty gap ratio
of 5.2 percent, share of poorest quintile in national consumption is 10.1
percent for rural sector and 7.9 percent for urban sector and prevalence of
underweight children is of the order of 47 percent. National Rural Employment
Act is a positive step to reduce the poverty ratio further.
(ii)
To
achieve universal primary education under Goal-2, India should increase the
primary school enrolment rate to 100 percent and wipe out the drop-outs by 2015
against 41.96 percent in 1991-92. The
drop-out rate for primary education during 2002-03 is 34.89 percent. The gross
enrolment ratio in primary education has tended to remain near 100 percent for
boys and recorded an increase of nearly 20 percentage points in the ten years
period from 1992-93 to 2002-03 for girls (93 percent). The literacy rate (7 years and above) has
also increased from 52.2 percent in 1992-93 to 65.4 percent in 2000-01.
(iii)
To
ensure gender parity in education levels in Goal-3,
India will have to promote female participation at all levels to reach a female
male proportion of equal level by 2015. The female male proportion in respect
of primary education was 71:100 in 1990-91 which has increased to 78:100 in
2000-01. During the same period, the proportion has increased from 49:100 to
63:100 in case of secondary education.
(iv)
Goal 4
aims at reducing under five mortality rate (U5MR) from 125 deaths per thousand
live births in 1988-92 to 42 in 2015.
The U5MR has decreased during the period 1998-2002 to 98 per thousand
live births. The infant mortality rate
(IMR) has also come down from 80 per thousand live births in 1990 to 60 per
thousand in 2003 and the proportion of 1 year old children immunised against
measles has increased from 42.2 percent in 1992-93 to 58.5 percent in 2002-03.
(v)
To achieve Goal-5, India should reduce maternal mortality (MMR) from 437
deaths per 100,000 live births in 1991 to 109 by 2015. The value of MMR for
1998 is 407. The proportion of births attended by skilled health personnel has
been continuously increasing, (from 25.5 percent in 1992-93 to 39.8 percent in
2002-03) thereby reducing the chances of occurrence of maternal deaths.
(vi)
In so far as Goal-6
is concerned, though India has a low prevalence of HIV among pregnant women as
compared to other developing countries, yet the prevalence rate has increased
from 0.74 per thousand pregnant women in 2002 to 0.86 in 2003. This increasing trend needs to be reversed
to achieve MDG 6. The prevalence and death rates associated with malaria are
consistently coming down. The death rate associated with TB has come down from
67 deaths per 100.000 population in 1990 to 33 per 100,000 population in 2003.
The proportion of TB patients successfully treated has also risen from 81% in
1996 to 86% in 2003.
(vii)
Goal-7 aims at
ensuring environmental sustainability.
As per assessment made in 2003, total land area covered under different
forests has been 20.64% due to Government’s persistent efforts to preserve the
natural resources. The reserved and protected forests together account for 19%
of the total land area to maintain biological diversity. The energy use has declined consistently
from about 36 kilogram oil equivalent in 1991-92 to about 32 kilogram oil
equivalent in 2003-04 to produce GDP worth Rs. 1000. The proportion of population without sustainable access to safe
drinking water and sanitation is to be halved by 2015 and India is on track to
achieve this target.
(viii)
Goal-8 is regarding the developing global partnership for development. It is basically meant for the Developed
Countries to provide development assistance to developing countries.. The
Government of India holds the following views regarding the role of the
developed countries in achieving this goal:
(a) The financial support needed to achieve the
targets under this Goal had been estimated for the least developed land locked
and small countries by a high-level panel on ‘Financing for Development at an
additional amount of US $ 50 billion which would be required for this purpose
every year till 2015.
(b) However, a huge gap still exists for those
countries between the development assistance required to meet the MDGs and what
has been pledged by the developed countries so far.
(c) Recent
months have seen new commitments toward reaching the internationally accepted
0.7 percent of Gross National Income (GNI) target. We have reminded that these
potential increases still leave development assistance donor countries as a
group well short of 0.7 percent.
(d) It is also
a matter of satisfaction that actual disbursements of ODA, in recent years,
have shown a welcome reversal of the declining trend that lasted for almost a
decade since the early 1990s. In this regard, it is important to realize that
unless aid commitments translate into actual delivery, securing MDGs will
remain elusive goals. We do hope that
all the developed countries would scale up the ODA to realize the goals
reaffirmed at the Monterrey Consensus.
(e) It has
also been our consistent position that additional resources for implementing
the development agenda should be channelized through the existing multilateral
agencies. Moreover, allocations must be
based on pre-defined and transparent criteria.
Our own development experience clearly indicates that, ultimately, it is
the availability of untied additional resources for use in accordance with
national development strategies, which is most beneficial for recipient
countries.
(f) To deal with the problems of debt, the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative was launched by the World Bank and
IMF and endorsed by 180 governments. In regard to the HIPC Initiative, India is
of the view that the Initiative should be met by additional funding from the
developed countries and the flow of concessional assistance to other countries
should not be reduced. India also
opposes the concept of “equitable burden sharing” since some of the non-Paris
Club creditor countries are themselves poor countries.
(g) We have supported the G8 initiative on irrevocable debt cancellation
for the HIPC countries which has now been adopted by IMF and the World Bank as
the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI). We have always been supportive of all efforts being extended to
the low-income countries (LICs), including those in Africa, where debt burdens
are serious threats to attainment of the MDGs.
(ix) With regard to one of the targets of the
Goal 8, i.e. in cooperation with the private sector, make available the
benefits of new technologies, especially information and communications, India
has made substantial progress in recent years.
The overall tele-density has remarkably increased from 0.67 percent in
1991 to 9.4 percent in June 2005. Use of
Personal Computers has also increased from 5.4 million PCs in 2001 to 14.5 million
in 2005 and there are 5.3 million internet subscribers as on March 2005 (2.3
internet users per 100 population and 0.5 per 100 internet subscribers).
5. The National Employment
Guarantee Act, Sarva Siksha Abhiyan, Total Literacy Campaign of the National
Literacy Mission, 73rd and 74th constitutional amendments
providing reservation for women, commitment for women empowerment in the NCMP,
National Health Mission, Total Sanitation Campaign and Bharat Nirman are some
of the important steps taken by the Government which will help in achieving the
Millennium Development Goals.