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Population and Sustainable Development

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Population and sustainable development

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT


Cairo, Egypt
5-13 September 1994

ICPD INFORMATION KIT -- STORY 6

AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO POVERTY, POPULATION AND SUSTAINABLE


DEVELOPMENT

Widespread poverty, environmental conditions, the use of natural


resources, and economic and social development are closely linked
to population growth and distribution. Ensuring that population and
development strategies acknowledge these links and address the full
range of related issues is a key objective of the International
Conference on Population and Development (ICPD).

Unsustainable patterns of consumption and production are


depleting natural resources and causing environmental degradation,
while reinforcing social inequity and poverty. The development
challenge is to meet the needs of present generations and improve
their quality of life in ways that do not compromise future
generations' ability to meet their own needs.

Chapter III of the draft Programme of Action of the


Conference, "Interrelationships between Population, Sustained

Economic Growth and Sustainable Development", spells out actions


aimed at meeting this challenge, in three related areas:
integrating population and development strategies; population,
sustained economic growth and poverty; and population and
environment.

INTEGRATED APPROACH SOUGHT


Macroeconomic and sectoral development policies have rarely given
due attention to population considerations. The ICPD draft
Programme states that explicitly taking population considerations
into account in economic and development strategies

--

planning,

decision-making and resource allocation at all levels and in all


regions

--

will contribute to both sustainable development and

poverty alleviation, and to slower population growth and an


improved quality of life.

The draft Programme calls for the integration of population


issues into the formulation, implementation, monitoring and
evaluation of all international, regional, national and local
policies and programmes relating to sustainable development.

Governments are also called upon to reduce and eliminate


unsustainable patterns of production and consumption, and promote
appropriate demographic policies. Developed countries are urged to
take the lead in achieving sustainable consumption patterns and
effective waste management.

POVERTY ALLEVIATION
Despite decades of development efforts and gains in such indicators

as life expectancy and national product, both the gap between rich
and poor nations and inequalities within nations have widened in
recent years. Serious economic, social, gender and other inequities
persist and hamper efforts to improve the quality of life for
hundreds of millions of people. Approximately 1 billion people live
in poverty and the number continues to mount.

Many developing countries and countries with economies in


transition face major development obstacles which make it
increasingly difficult to improve the quality of life of their
people in a sustainable manner. These include persistent trade
imbalances, the slow-down in the world economy, debt-servicing
problems, and the need for technologies and external assistance.

The draft Programme states that sustainable development and


poverty eradication should be supported by macro-economic policies
designed to provide an appropriate international economic
environment, as well as by good governance, effective national
policies and efficient national institutions.

Widespread poverty remains the major challenge to development


efforts. Poverty is often accompanied by unemployment,
malnutrition, illiteracy, low status of women, exposure to
environmental risks and limited access to social and health
services, including reproductive health services which include
family planning. All these factors contribute to high levels of
fertility, morbidity, and mortality, as well as to low economic
productivity.

Poverty is also closely related to inappropriate distribution


of population, to unsustainable use and inequitable distribution of
such natural resources as land and water, and to serious
environmental degradation.

Efforts to slow population growth, to reduce poverty, to


achieve economic progress, to improve environmental protection, and
to reduce unsustainable consumption and production patterns are
mutually reinforcing. Slower population growth has in many
countries bought more time to adjust to future population
increases. This has increased those countries' ability to attack
poverty, protect and repair the environment, and build the base for
future sustainable development.

Efforts to eradicate poverty require investments in basic


education, sanitation, drinking water, housing, food supply and
infrastructure for rapidly growing populations. This strains
already weak economies and limits development options. Jobs must be
created for growing numbers of young people entering the labour
force at a time when unemployment is already widespread. The number
of elderly persons requiring public support is also increasing
rapidly. Sustained economic growth in the context of sustainable
development is necessary to accommodate all these pressures.

Success in eradicating poverty, in turn, would contribute to


slowing population growth and to achieving population stabilization
earlier than would otherwise be the case.

Proposed actions in this regard include: giving priority in


national population and development strategies and budgets to human
resource development, job creation and training; eliminating
inequities and barriers to women in the workforce; taking measures
to strengthen food, nutrition and agricultural policies and
programmes; promoting women's participation in policy-making and
implementation; and strengthening women's access to productive
resources, including land.

POPULATION AND ENVIRONMENT


Agenda 21, adopted at the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and
Development, addressed major environment and development challenges
such as poverty, consumption, demographic dynamics, human health
and human settlements, and a broad range of environmental and
natural resource concerns. The ICPD draft Programme of Action
explicitly supports the objectives and actions agreed upon in
Agenda 21, and then goes on to recommend five actions to help
achieve population and environment integration.

This process should include: integrating demographic factors


into environment impact assessments; developing income-generation
and employment strategies directed at the rural poor and those
living within or on the edge of fragile ecosystems; utilizing
demographic data to promote sustainable resource management;
modifying unsustainable consumption and production patterns through
economic, legislative and administrative measures; and addressing
the ecological implications of inevitable increases in population
and changes in concentration and distribution, particularly in

ecologically vulnerable areas and urban agglomerations.

Meeting the basic human needs of growing populations is


dependent on a healthy environment. Environmental degradation and
resource depletion are exacerbated by demographic factors, in
combination with poverty and lack of access to resources in some
areas, and with excessive consumption and wasteful production
patterns in others.

The draft Programme of Action also emphasizes the need for


women's full participation at all levels of population and
environmental decision-making to achieve sustainable management of
natural resources. In addition, it calls for research on linkages
among population, consumption and production, the environment and
natural resources, and human health as a guide to effective
sustainable development policies.

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