9 February, 2010         
Help AsiaNews | About us | P.I.M.E. |




Voli Low Cost Roma
Voli Milano



e-mail this to a friend printable version


» 08/11/2007 11:22
PHILIPPINES - ASIA
In Asia 15% of the population survives on less than one dollar a day
by Santosh Digal
Despite economic growth in some areas of the continent, poverty levels remain high. The Asian Bank demands “new strategies” for development and a more equitable wealth distribution, as well as sanctioning 800 million dollars for development programmes.

 Manila (AsiaNews) – In Asia 614 million people – equal to 15% of the continental population – survive on less than one dollar a day, poverty and hunger remain widespread particularly in rural areas.  These statistics were released by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which underlines that the extreme need in rural areas despite the economic growth in many countries on the continent in the last 3 years.

The data was published ahead at the start of a two-day conference organized with the International Food Policy Research Institute in Manila, at which the ADB urged “new approaches to uplift the region's poorest, which are concentrated in rural areas and depend on agriculture for their livelihood”. Joachim von Braun director general of the research institute, said “millions of people have been lifted out of poverty, but millions more remain, particularly in rural areas”.

By 2015, the region will still be home to half the world's poor and best projections indicate that three-quarters of them will live in rural areas. At the same time, Asia is projected to contribute nearly half the world's gross domestic product. “Ironically”, ADB Vice President C. Lawrence Greenwood said “East Asia's remarkable economic growth, which was built upon strong agricultural gains, is now contributing to expanding income inequalities between those living in cities and those in rural areas". "This growing gap is not economically or politically sustainable over time”. This is why he is urging “new strategies to address emerging challenges”, including the “rapidly changing global goods market for high-value foods like fruits, vegetables, and dairy products; the potential offered by bio fuel production; and the growing importance of non-farming activities as income sources for the rural poor”.

In the coming years, the bank plans to raise assistance to the agriculture and natural resources sector, for which ADB lending topped 800 million dollars in 2006, up from less than 200 million in 2003.

Meanwhile, the Philippine government rescued 41,200 children in child labour abuse: a report of the Department of Labour and Employment’s’s Bureau of Women and Young Workers (BWYW) said most of these were employed in the sugar and other industries.

 


e-mail this to a friend printable version

See also
08/29/2008 PHILIPPINES
Almost 26 million poor in the Philippines according to the Asian Development Bank
by Santosh Digal
04/02/2008 ASIA
Inflation, great risk to Asia’s emerging economies’
05/05/2008 ASIA
Food Crisis: emergency aid but also rethinking development in Asia
06/24/2005 ASIA
Defeating poverty: a distant dream for half of Asia
04/29/2009 PHILIPPINES – ASIA
Climate change “more dangerous” than economic crisis, Asian bank says
by Santosh Digal


Dossier

Editor's choices
CHINA - VIETNAM
Wei Jingsheng: China and Vietnam, economic giants on the brink of change or collapse
by Wei JingshengThe great Chinese dissident compares the two tigers of Asian Development and warns: the domestic opposition is increasing, and is increasingly determined. Even the West is disappointed: its policy of tolerance towards human rights violations, has not led to anything, not even greater economic benefits
CHINA - USA
The heroism of Google and the fear of China
by Bernardo CervelleraObama and Hillary Clinton want to end Internet censorship. But China is not willing to loosen its grip on censorship, essential in maintaining the dictatorship of the Communist Party. Relations between the two nations at the risk, while human rights activists applaud.
VIETNAM
Brother viciously beaten in Dong Chiem, a parish under siege
by J.B. An Dang In a statement to be read in all churches until next Sunday, the archdiocese of Hanoi speaks of hundreds of police agents and soldiers forcibly blocking anyone who tries to reach the Dong Chiem parish church. Those who dare approach are threatened and can be arrested.

Books
La Cina di Mao processa la Chiesa
di Angelo S.Lazzarotto
pp. 528


Il rovescio dellemedaglie
di Bernardo Cervellera
pp. 240


Il Vescovo partigiano
EMI 2007 pp. 448
di Piero Gheddo

Missione Birmania
1867-2007 I 140 anni del Pime in Myanmar
di Piero Gheddo


Alberico Crescitelli
Martire in Cina
di Angelo S. Lazzarotto e Gianni Criveller


Clemente Vismara,
il Santo dei bambini
di Piero Gheddo


Missione Cina
Viaggio nell'Impero
tra mercato e repressione
di Bernardo Cervellera

Copyright © 2003 AsiaNews C.F. 00889190153 All rights reserved. Content on this site is made available for personal, non-commercial use only. You may not reproduce, republish, sell or otherwise distribute the content or any modified or altered versions of it without the express written permission of the editor. Photos on AsiaNews.it are largely taken from the internet and thus considered to be in the public domain. Anyone contrary to their publication need only contact the editorial office which will immediately proceed to remove the photos.