The International Day for the Eradication of Poverty
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic
Studies
Islamabad, October 16, 2021: The following is the message of the UNSG His Excellency Antonia
Guterres on the occasion of the International Day for the Eradication of
Poverty:
Poverty
is a moral indictment of our times.
For
the first time in two decades, extreme poverty is on the rise.
Last
year, around 120 million people fell into poverty as the COVID-19 pandemic
wreaked havoc on economies and societies.
A
lopsided recovery is further deepening inequalities between the Global North
and South. Solidarity is missing in action – just when we need it
most.
For example, vaccine inequality
is allowing variants to develop and run wild, condemning
the world to millions of more deaths, and prolonging an
economic slowdown that could cost trillions of dollars. We
must end this outrage, tackle debt distress and ensure recovery investment in
countries with the greatest need.
On
this International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, we commit to ‘Building
Forward Better’. This requires a three-pronged approach to global recovery:
First,
the recovery must be transformative – because we cannot go back to the endemic
structural disadvantages and inequalities that perpetuated poverty even before
the pandemic. We need stronger political will and partnerships to achieve
universal social protection by 2030 and invest in job re-skilling for the
growing green economy. And we must invest in quality jobs in the care economy,
which will promote greater equality and ensure everyone receives the dignified
care they deserve.
Second,
the recovery must be inclusive – because an uneven recovery is leaving much of
humanity behind, increasing the vulnerability of already marginalized groups,
and pushing the Sustainable Development Goals ever further out of reach.
The
number of women in extreme poverty far outpaces that of men. Even before the
pandemic, the 22 richest men in the world had more wealth than all the women in
Africa – and that gap has only grown. We cannot recover with only half our
potential. Economic investments must target women entrepreneurs, provide a greater
formalization of the informal sector, focus on education, social
protection, universal childcare, health care, and decent work, as well as
bridge the digital divide including its deep gender dimension.
Third,
the recovery must be sustainable – because we need to build a resilient,
decarbonized, and net-zero world.
Through
it all, we need to listen far more to the views and guidance of people living
in poverty, address indignities and dismantle barriers to inclusion in every
society.
Today
and every day, let us join hands to end poverty and create a world of justice,
dignity, and opportunity for all.
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