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Working Paper: How Should MDG Implementation Be Measured? |
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Source: IPC-IG
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May 19, 2010
IPC-IG Working Paper 63
How Should MDG Implementation Be Measured: Faster Progress or Meeting Targets?
The International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (IPC-IG), formerly the International Poverty Centre, is a partnership between the Poverty Practice of the Bureau for Development Policy, UNDP and the Government of Brazil.
Abstract:
'This paper questions the methodology that is widely used to assess progress in implementing
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a methodology that asks whether the targets are
likely to be met. This approach is inappropriate, since the MDGs were neither designed as nor
intended to be planning targets. They were political commitments, made by world leaders,
that define priorities in a normative framework and that can be used as benchmarks in
evaluating progress. In this framework the appropriate question is whether more is being done
to live up to that commitment, resulting in faster progress. We present a methodology and
analysis using this new framework, and find that our assessment of 'progress' differs
considerably from that arising from the conventional methodology. For example, while access
to safe water is touted as an MDG success, only a third of the countries improved at a faster
rate. Overall, in most indicators and in most countries, progress has not accelerated.'
Download: IPC Working Paper number 63 349 kb
Website: http://www.ipc-undp.org
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