World Development
      Indicators 2010 Opens Data to Measure Progress
    
  
    WASHINGTON, April
    20, 2010 — The World Development Indicators (WDI)
    2010, released today, gives a statistical progress toward
    achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). 
     The WDI
    database, launched along with the World Bank’s Open Data initiative to
    provide free data to all users, includes more than 900 indicators
    documenting the state of all the world’s economies. The WDI
    covers education, health, poverty, environment, economy, trade, and much
    more. 
    "The WDI provides
    a valuable statistical picture of the world and how far we've come in
    advancing development," said Justin Yifu Lin, the World
    Bank’s Chief Economist and the Senior Vice President for Development
    Economics.  “Making this comprehensive data free for all
    is a dream come true." 
      
    This year’s WDI focuses on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), now in
    their 10th year. It shows that considerable progress has been made in
    reaching these challenging goals. Despite the economic and financial crisis
    that has swept over the globe, the target to reduce by half the proportion
    of people living in extreme poverty is still within reach in several
    developing regions. Home to the most people living on less than $1.25 a day,
    Asia has accounted for much of this remarkable achievement. Sub-Saharan
    Africa meanwhile remains off track to meet the income poverty goal. 
    But progress has been
    uneven at the country level. Only 49 of 87 countries with data are on track
    to achieve the poverty target. Some 41 percent of the people in low- and
    middle-income countries live in countries that are unlikely to achieve the
    target. And 12 percent live in the 60 countries for which there are
    insufficient data to assess progress. 
    “An important part
    of the World Bank’s strategy for fighting poverty is improving the
    statistical systems in developing countries. Governments, citizens, and aid
    agencies need reliable statistics to shape their policies,” said Shaida
    Badiee, director of the Development Data Group that
    produces the World Development Indicators. 
     Highlights from the 2010 WDI
    include: 
    Economy 
     
      - The
        world economy grew by 2.8  percent in 2008 measured in purchasing
        power parity terms, down from 5.0 percent in 2007. Low- and
        middle-income economies grew faster than high-income economies,
        increasing their share of world output by more than a percentage point
        to 43.3 percent.
      
 - Trade
        fell in almost every region under the impact of the global recession.
        South Asia was the only exception. Developing economies now account for
        33 of merchandise exports and 21 percent of service exports. But
        low-income economies are largely left out, providing only 1 percent of
        world exports.
 
     
     Educational
    attainment 
    
      - The MDGs call for all
        children to be able to complete primary school by 2015. This goal is
        close to being achieved. At the end of the 2007 school year, 7 out of 10
        people in the developing world lived in countries that have achieved
        full primary school enrollment or are on track to do so. Still this
        leaves 72 million primary school-age children not enrolled, most of them
        in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.
 
     
     Gender equality 
    
      - Education
        opportunities for girls have expanded everywhere, but gender gaps remain
        large in low-income economies, especially at the primary and secondary
        levels.
      
 - More
        women are in the workforce, although they are more likely than men to be
        in vulnerable jobs, without regular salaries or benefits.
      
 - More
        women are entering national parliaments. The largest gains have been
        made in South Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean, where women now
        occupy more than 20 percent of the seats.
 
     
     Child health 
    
      - Increasing
        immunization rates, better management of diarrheal diseases, and malaria
        prevention programs have all contributed to falling mortality rates for
        children under age five. In developing countries, the child mortality
        rate declined from 101 per 1,000 in 1990 to 73 in 2008.
      
 - Thirty-nine
        countries, representing 45 percent of the population of developing
        countries have achieved or are on track to achieve a two-thirds
        reduction in child mortality before 2015.
 
     
     Mothers’ health 
    
      - New
        estimates of maternal mortality, which became available after the WDI
        went to press, show substantial decreases in maternal deaths for the
        first time since setting the fifth MDG target of a 75 percent reduction
        in the mortality ratio from levels prevailing in 1990. Official
        estimates from the United Nations later this year are likely to confirm
        this trend.
      
 - The
        proportion of pregnant women who had at least one antenatal visit rose
        from 64 percent in 1990 to 79 percent in 2008. But the proportion who
        had the recommended four or more visits is still less than 50 percent in
        South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, where most maternal and infant deaths
        occur.
 
     
     Combating disease 
    
      - New
        HIV infections have fallen by 17 percent since 2000, and wider access to
        antiretroviral treatment has contributed to the first decline in AIDS
        deaths since the epidemic began. But there are still 33.4 million people
        – two-thirds of them in Sub-Saharan Africa living with HIV/AIDS and
        most of them women.
      
 - Tuberculosis
        prevalence has fallen, but the target of halving the 1990 prevalence
        rate by 2015 is unlikely to be met. In 2007 there were 13.7 million
        cases globally, down only slight from 2006.
      
 - There
        were nearly 1 million malaria-related deaths in 2006. Ninety percent of
        malaria deaths occur in Sub-Saharan Africa, and most are children under
        age 5. Progress has been made in scaling up the use of
        insecticide-treated bed nets among children, which rose from 2 percent
        in 2000 to 20 percent in 2006.
 
     
     Environmental
    sustainability 
    
      - Net
        forest losses since 1990 have been substantial but recent data show a
        slowing in the global rate of deforestation. In East Asia, China has
        added to its forest cover by converting marginal crop lands.
      
 - While
        economies have become more efficient in their use of energy, reducing
        carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP produced, carbon dioxide
        emissions per capita continue to rise.
      
 - More
        people have access to improved (protected and accessible) water sources,
        and at least 65 developing countries are on track to reduce by half the
        proportion of people lacking access to water source. But more than 1.5
        billion people lack access to toilets, latrines and other forms of
        improved sanitation and there has been little improvement since 1990.
 
     
     Development
    partnership 
    
      - Aid
        flows from the member of the OECD Development Assistance Committee have
        increases – from $69 billion in 2000 to $122 billion in 2008 – but
        even with further increases in 2009 and 2010 they will fall short of the
        pledges made five years ago.
      
 - Better
        debt management, trade expansion, and, for the poorest countries,
        substantial debt relief have reduced the burden of debt service.  
      
 - Average
        tariffs have been falling and countries are trading more freely, but
        many obstacles remain for developing country exporters. Some are imposed
        by their trading partners – such as high peak tariffs applied
        selectively to certain good and subsidies paid by rich countries to
        domestic agricultural producers – and some are the result of poor
        infrastructure and inefficiencies that limit the ability of developing
        countries to compete in the global market place.
 
     
     In addition to the print
    edition, the full WDI database is available on the Web through data.worldbank.org
    or on CD-ROM. Several ‘Little Data Books’, which provide key data on a
    range of topics, are also available. An Atlas of Global Development is also
    available.  
     
    Journalists
    can access the material before the expiration of the embargo through the
    World Bank Online Media Briefing Center at: http://media.worldbank.org/secure 
    Accredited journalists who do not already have a password may request
    one by completing the registration form at: http://media.worldbank.org/ 
    The report and related material will be available to the public on the
    World Wide Web immediately after the embargo expires at: http://www.worldbank.org/data/wdi 
    
      
        
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