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Aid for Trade to Africa surpasses other regions, says ECA-led study

Aid for Trade to Africa surpasses other regions, says ECA-led study

ECA Press Release No. 90/2011 Web: http://www.uneca.org/

Addis Ababa, 21 June 2011 (ECA) – African trade experts from member State capitals and the Geneva-based African trade negotiators assembled on Tuesday in Geneva for a
roundtable organized by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) in
preparation for the 18-19 July, 3rd Global Aid for Trade (AfT) review. The aim of the
Review will be to assess the impact of AfT on economic growth, trade creation and poverty reduction.

According to the Information and Communication Service of the ECA, the day’s
roundtable discussed a collaborative study prepared under the auspices of the African
AfT Working Group. The Working Group comprised the African Development Bank, the ECA and the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Speaking at the meeting, Stephen Karingi, Acting Director of the ECA Regional
Integration and Trade Division said, “AfT to Africa enjoys continuing growth, with no
apparent decline, following the global economic crisis and no signs of diversion from
other ODA.” He added that compared to other regions, Africa now supersedes Asia as the principal regional recipient of AfT.

Accordingly, economic infrastructure continues to enjoy the largest share of AfT to
Africa, closely followed by building productive capacity. The study shows that up to USD 7.2 billion has gone towards spending in economic infrastructure.

“During the period under review (2006-09), a few countries and regions appear to
receive a disproportionate share, but per capita AfT tells another story,” said Karingi.

He explained that as an example, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Tanzania were
among the top AfT recipients. “Yet, on a per capita basis, Island economies received
on average, a higher percentage (17.6) than say, non-LDCs, which received 9.9 per cent.”

Karingi also said that the increase in AfT to Africa is more impressive than the total
ODA flows to the region. “In other words, AfT to Africa increases at much faster rate
than the total ODA flows; growth rate of total ODA stands at 11.1% , while AfT 21.4%) during the period under review (2006-09).”

He argued that the picture demonstrates that AfT to Africa “has been rising, both in
volume terms and as a proportion of both the global AfT and total ODA to the region.”
To the relief of social development actors at the meeting, the study revealed that the
increase in the volume of AfT “was additional and not at the expense of a diversion of resources from other social or economic sectors.”

Case stories were also submitted to the WTO, which according to Karingi, provided a snapshot of AfT experiences on the ground in Africa.

“Of the 269 case stories submitted to the WTO, 114 pertain to Africa,” said Karingi. He added that ECA’s case story documenting the impact of AfT on specific binding constraints is a notable contribution on AfT Approaches for the whole continent.

A number of other issues emerged from the study, including the fact that AfT flow to
Africa is the most stable compared to other developing regions, such as Asia, America,
Europe and Oceania. There are also considerable variations among African countries in
AfT flows in terms of volume, per capita, ratio of disbursements to commitments as well as the share of AfT in the total ODA flows.

The conclusions will feed into the African Group position to the Committee of Trade
and Development to be held later in the week on 23-24 June 2011 and the Third Global Review of Aid for Trade to be held on 18-19 July 2011.



June 22, 2011 | 9:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Brazil launches National Poverty Alleviation Plan – Brasil Sem Miséria

02-06-2011 MRE: “BRASIL SEM MISÉRIA” NATIONAL POVERTY ALLEVIATION PLAN

Brazil launches National Poverty Alleviation Plan

Comprehensive social program aims to lift 16.2 million citizens out of extreme poverty

BRASÍLIA (02 June 2011) – Brazil´s President Dilma Rousseff today launched a
comprehensive national poverty alleviation plan named “Brasil Sem Miséria” to lift
16.2 million Brazilians out of extreme poverty through cash transfer initiatives, increased access to education, health, welfare, sanitation and electricity, and
productive inclusion. This flagship programof the federal government will create new
programs and expand existing initiatives in partnership with states, municipalities,
public and private companies and civil society organizations to extend the opportunities generated by Brazil´s strong economic growth to its neediest citizens.

“What was a matter of moral ethics and human rights became a key pillar to bring
Brazil’s growth to another level. Social inclusion makes our growth sustainable,” said President Dilma Rousseff during a launchevent today in Brasilia.

According to the President, the fight against poverty is an essential step in the
development of Brazil, but is not the only one. “Along with our fight against poverty,
we are implementing other actions rooted in economic policy based on fiscal control and the expansion of opportunities,” added President Rousseff.

The goal of “Brasil Sem Miséria” is to raise the national average income and overall
quality of life for the Brazilian population by focusing on the demographic that lives
below the extreme poverty line. The plan will identify these families and support them
in an integrated and personalized way through an array of social programs, according to their individual needs. To achieve its goal, the government will utilize the
extreme poverty maps produced by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) based on data collected through the 2010 census.

“Through the poverty alleviation plan, Brazilwill reach our most vulnerable citizens,
wherever they are. From now on, it isn´t the poorest people who have to chase the
State, but the opposite,” said Minister of Social Development and the Fight Against Hunger Tereza Campello.

“Brasil Sem Miséria” will prioritize the expansion of a broad range of public services
to the extremely poor, including documentation, electricity,literacy, medical, dental and ophthalmic treatment, daycare and sanitation. Citizens who are not already
beneficiaries of Brazil’s existing cash transfer programmes, such as “Bolsa Familia”, will be registered for these programs. In addition, the program will emphasize
“productive inclusion” at both the national and regional levels, increasing the skills
and capabilities of citizens to play a functional role in the national economy. In
rural areas, for example, “Brasil Sem Miséria” will encourage increased production through technical assistance, seed distribution and commercial support. In urban
areas, the program will focus on job training and the identification of employment opportunities and demands.

More than 7,000 Centers for Social Assistance spread throughout every municipality
will be the bridge between the families and the array of social programs included in
the poverty alleviation plan. Other social assistance centers are to be built in new locations.

Search activities will identify citizens in need

An active search strategy will be a critical first component of the national plan.
Professional teams will use national demographic data and other methods of outreach to
systematically locate Brazil´s poorest families in order to register them in social
programs and provide support. These teams will also identify existing services and
assess the need to create new social initiatives for unique populations. This initial
stage will include joint community efforts,campaigns, lectures, social and educational
activities, home visits and database cross-referencing to support search activities,
as well as training forsocialworkers to address the needs of families living under the extreme poverty line.

Overcoming the poverty line

The poverty alleviation plan is aimed at Brazilians livingin households with a monthly
income is R$ 70 (US$ 45) or less per person, fulfilling a commitment made by President
Rousseff at the start of her administration in January 2011. National data indicates
that 59 percent of the target citizens live in Brazil’s Northeast region, 47 percent live in rural areas, and 40 percent are 14 years of age or younger.

“It was only possible to reduce inequality and poverty in Brazilin recent years, when
the government introduced actions that combine economic growth with social inclusion,
such as increasing employment, enhancing the minimum wage, expanding social programs
and increasing access to credit. The results obtained so far – 28 million Brazilians
pulled out of poverty and 36 million joining the middle class – confirm that this
strategy is effective. With the poverty alleviation plan, we will cross the map of
extreme poverty with the map of economic opportunity and allow millions of Brazilians to overcome the poverty line,” said Minister Tereza Campello.

Productive inclusion program will offer job training for 1.7 million urban citizens

Urban productive inclusion initiatives will encourage entrepreneurship and fair trade, offering two million citizens professional training courses and employment opportunities to meet demands in the private and public sectors.

To increase job qualifications, the program will aim to serve 1.7 million citizens within the age of the labor force (18 to 65 years) in coordination with existing
government programs and services, including: the Public System of Labor, Employment
and Income; the National Access to TechnicalSchool (Pronatec) program; the National
Youth Inclusion Program (Projovem); the Growth Acceleration Program (PAC); the “My
House, My Life” housing program; as well as the Network of Food and Nutrition Centers.

Other productive inclusion initiatives include programs to provide official
documentation, and extend access to health services, microcredit and vocational guidance.

Garbage pickers to receive tailored support,increasingrecyclable materials collection in Brazil“Brasil Sem Miséria” will also provide support for the organization of
collectors of reusable and recyclable materials, commonly known as “pickers”. For this group, the aim is to improve working conditions and increase opportunities for
socioeconomic inclusion, with emphasis on those citizens living in the capitals and
metropolitan areas, covering 260 municipalities. The poverty alleviation plan will also work to better integrate pickers of recyclable materials into
municipality-ledrecyclables collection programs. The plan will provide training and
strengthen participation of 60,000 garbage pickers in recyclables collection programs by 2014, offer infrastructure support for 280,000 pickers and strengthen 100 recyclable materials trade networks.

A four-fold increase in Food Acquisition Program assistance to family farmers

To address the needs of rural communities, the national poverty alleviation plan aims to increase by four the number of small farmers assisted by the Food Acquisition
Program (FAP). Currently, 66,000 households benefit from the program, which aims to
reach 255,000 families by 2014. With this increase, the proportion of extremely poor farmers within all families assisted by the FAP will rise from 41 percent to 57 percent. Currently, 156,000 farmers sell their output through this program.

To support these farmers, the federal government has guaranteed a team of 11
technicians for every thousand families. The plan also includes subsidies of R$ 2,400
every six months for families to support the production and marketing of surplus food.
This allowance will be granted for a maximum period of two years. Payment will be ensured through the Bolsa Familia card – a tool used by the Ministry of Social Development for distribute payments to families assisted by the national income transfer program, BolsaFamilia.

In addition, 253,000 households will receive seeds and other farming materials such as
fertilizers. Increasing the purchase of family farming products by publicand pivate
institutions such as hospitals, schools, universities, day care centers and prisons, is also a goal of the plan.

Access to water and electric power to be increased in rural and urban areas

Access to water for consumption and production will also be increased by “Brasil Sem
Miséria”. Under the new plan, the construction of new cisterns for farming and animal
husbandry will reach 600,000 rural households by 2013. Small properties will also be granted irrigation tools, as well as assistance for the recovery of wells.

By 2013, rainwater cisterns will be built to ensure access to water for the
consumption of 750,000 families. Since 2003, the government has allocated funds for the construction of 340,000 cisterns in the semiarid region. The deployment of complementary and collective supply systems to 272,000 households is another initiative to increase access to water. These various programs aim to reach both
dispersed rural populations as well as those living in more densely populated areas.

In addition, the plan aims to extent electricity to an additional 257,000 households
in Brazilby 2014. This figure is the result of IBGE data of the population living in
extreme poverty cross-referenced with information from the energy supply companies.

Green Grant: Quarterly grants of R$ 300 for environmental preservation

The federal government will create an income transfer program targeted specifically
for families in extreme poverty that promote environmental conservation in areas where
they live and work. The “Bolsa Verde”, or Green Grant, in the amount of R$ 300 will be
paid every quarter to families that preserve national forests, extractive reserves and
sustainable development areas. Grants will be transferred through the Bolsa Familia card.

Another 800,000 families and 1.3 million children will be added to Bolsa Familia program

Another key initiative of the national poverty alleviation plan will be to add 800,000 families who meet the requirements but haven’t yet been registered to Brazil’s
successful cash transfer program, Bolsa Familia. Proactive efforts will be made by the government to locate these potential beneficiaries, in order to complete their registration and achieve this goal by December 2013.

In addition, the government will increase the number of children and adolescents under age 15 that each family can file for benefits under the Bolsa Familia program. Currently, each family receives an additional R$ 32 per child each month, for a
maximum of three children. This limit is now increased to a maximum of 5 children per family, adding 1.3 million children and adolescents to the 15.7 million already benefiting from Bolsa Familia today. Among the extremely poor, 40 percent of the
children receiving assistance are under the age of 14. In April 2011, the government readjusted the amount of the benefit paid to children at this age by 45 percent.

In addition to expanding the reach of this national program, the federal government is currently negotiating with states and municipalities to adopt further and complementary cash transfer initiatives.

“Brasil Sem Miséria” will increase the provision of high quality public services

The expansion and increase in quality of public services offered to people in extreme
poverty is the basic mandate of the national poverty alleviation plan. In order to
maximize the impact of the program, “Brasil Sem Miséria” will increase and relocate programswith awareness, mobilization and training.

Key areas of focus will include:

Documentation and civil registration
Access to electricity
The fight against child labor
Community kitchens and food banks
Sanitation
Support for the homeless population
Nursery school and kindergarten
Household Health assistance program (Saúde da Família)
Maternal Health Assistance Network
Medication for hypertension and diabetes
Dental care
Ophthalmologicalassistance
The fight against crack cocaine and other drugs
Social assistance, through the CRAS Centres, as well as specialized centers (CREAS)

KEY FIGURES

Pull 16.2 million people out of extreme poverty

Target families whose household monthly income is up to R$ 70 per capita (US $45)

59% of the target audience is located in the Northeast, 47% live in rural areas; and 40% are under the age of 14

Training of 1.7 million people aged 18-65

Train and strengthen participation of 60,000 garbage pickers in recyclables collection programs by 2014

Provide infrastructure to 280,000 garbage pickers and strengthen 100 recyclable materials trade networks

Increase by four times the number of farmers in extreme poverty assisted by the Food Acquisition

Program (PAA), raising the number of assisted farmers to 255,000

Provide teams of 11 technicians for every thousand families of small farmers

Provide subsidies for family farmers of up to R$ 2,400 every six months per
family for two years to support the production and marketing of food surplus

253,000 family farming households will receive seeds and farming inputs

600,000 households to have rainwater cisterns for production

257,000 households to have access to electric power

Building rainwater cisterns for 750,000 families by the end of 2013

Implementation of complementary and collective water supply systems to 272 000 families

“Green Grant”: R$ 300 quarterly grants for families ensuring environmental preservation in their area of residence and work

BolsaFamilia income transfer program will reach additional 800,000 people

More than 1.3 million children and adolescents to be included in the Bolsa Familia cash transfer program



June 7, 2011 | 6:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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weitzenegger.de Green Economy and Development | June 2011

This Newsletter guides you to content relevant for international co-operation and
economic development. Reposted from sources linked below. Feel free to circulate it to your network. Edited by Karsten Weitzenegger

CONTENT

Special Issue: Green Economy and Development
On the road again to Rio+20

1. UNEP: Green Economy is key catalyst for growth and poverty eradication 2. OECD: Green and growth go together
3. The Green Star Hotel Initiative supports the greening of Egypt’s tourism industry 4. UNCTAD releases book ”Road to Rio +20”
5. UNEP Report spotlights benefits from boosting funding for forests 6. LDCs set to jump start to a green economy
7. The Africa Competitiveness Report 2011
8. Economic Report on Africa 2011 – Focused industrial policy 9. Climate Change and Asian Development Bank
10. EU renewable energy targets may boost land grabbing in developing countries 11. German government backs new energy strategy
12. Recommended Publications
13. Recommended Training and Events
14. Recommended Websites

Get a daily newsletter service at http://tinyurl.com/newsboxx Follow me on Twitter: http://www.weitzenegger.de/en/twitter.html



June 6, 2011 | 10:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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UNCTAD releases book ”Road to Rio +20”

UNCTAD has published the first in a series of volumes focusing on issues pertinent to ”green” economic growth – a low-carbon, resource-efficient approach to development intended to raise living standards in sustainable fashion while combating climate change and conserving biodiversity. The intent is to give practical expression to the concept of sustainable development adopted at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. The book features 14 articles and is intended to highlight critical topics and focus global discussion in advance of the 2012 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development. The Rio +20 summit has as its main theme ”the green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication. ”It also will focus on the institutional framework for sustainable development at the international and national levels. http://www.unctad.org/trade_env/greeneconomy/roadtorioGE.asp



June 6, 2011 | 5:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Governing Development in Africa – Economic Report on Africa 2011 – Focused industrial policy

To catch up and, more important, to meet its own development objectives, Africa needs to promote rapid industrialization that will promote innovation, technological adoption, entrepreneurship, high value added and employment-generating manufacturing. This will enable the continent to overcome the low contribution of industry and manufacturing to GDP and employment. The formulation and implementation of industrial policy will enable African governments to target particular activities or sectors for support. Each country will have to identify niche industries where it has competitive advantages or the capability to develop dynamic advantages. This in turn will contribute to Africa’s industrial development. However, unlike most countries in post-independence Africa, which thwarted the emergence of a capitalist class, the 21st century African developmental state has to vigorously attempt to build an indigenous capitalist class.
Also, unlike the experiences of the 20th century developmental States elsewhere, industrialization in Africa in the 21st century will have to be sensitive to environmental sustainability (chapter 3). The development of renewable energy and a green economy as part of Africa’s overall development strategy cannot be over-emphasized. Renewable energy in particular and the green economy in general offer Africa a basis for transforming the structures of its economies and to create sustainable jobs and livelihoods.
The industrial strategy of the developmental States of East Asia suggests that creating industrial winners through fiscal incentives to facilitate enhanced productivity and some form of protectionism were critical for the growth of local manufacturing. While protectionism may be difficult and largely unfashionable in a globalized economy regulated by WTO, nonetheless, as part of their industrial policy, African States should ensure a phasing-out process to protect local industries, which is necessary for their growth and consolidation. This will enable them to compete, over time, in the global economy.

http://www.uneca.org/era2011



June 6, 2011 | 5:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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