The Future State of the World: What it means for Australia's foreign aid program
Date
Authors
Wesley, Michael
O'Keeffe, Annmaree
Hayward-Jones, Jenny
Thirlwell, Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Lowy Institute for International Policy
Abstract
In January 2011, the Australian Government’s Independent Panel to Review Aid
Effectiveness commissioned the Lowy Institute to undertake a study of the future state
of the world as it relates to the Australian Government foreign aid program.
Lowy Institute researchers have conducted a broad review of statistical projections,
global strategic, economic, political and social trends, long-term dynamics in
development and development assistance, reports on the likely evolution of the world
undertaken by governments and research organizations, and emerging dynamics in
finance and trade, demography and climate, food, resources and water production and
consumption, and governance and institutions.
Despite the current attention on the Millennium Development Goals, there are clear
indications that the nature and definition of the development challenge is changing,
and will continue to evolve between 2015 and 2020. According to World Bank
statistics, global poverty has been reducing at an average rate of one percent per year
between 1980 and 2005, although some estimates suggest an even more rapid
decline.1 The global financial crisis briefly pushed rates higher, but the World Bank
projects a likely continued fall in global poverty, albeit at lower rates. Patterns of
poverty reduction point to a markedly different global profile by 2020. For a large
number of developing countries, extreme poverty will have fallen to below 5 per cent
of their populations. In some cases, this is up to four times less than the 2005
estimates. The exception will be in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia although in
both cases, there will have been remarkable advances in lowering the percentage if
not numbers of extremely poor people in both regions.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
2099-01-31