UN report warns poverty goals likely to be missed The infant death rate for African Americans in Washington DC is higher than that in the cities of the Indian state of Kerala, the United Nations has warned as part of a damning review of poverty and inequality around the world. Published ahead of next weeks summit in New York to review progress in meeting goals to halve extreme poverty by 2015, the UNs human development report says: US health indicators are far below those that might be expected on the basis of national wealth. The report, published by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), says the outcome is due partly to persistent and extreme disparities between people from different social and ethnic groups, as shown by recent images of poor black people stranded in New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. The findings reflect a new focus by the UN upon differences within countries as well as between countries, as policymakers try to think of new ways to achieve the millennium development goals (MDGs), agreed in 2000. India and China, which have both enjoyed sustained economic growth, face worrying challenges. There are worrying indications that social progress is starting to lag behind economic performance, with the slowdown in the rate of reduction in child deaths a special concern. The UN notes that China spends 5 per cent of its GDP on health, but public spending now amounts to less than 2 per cent of GDP. |