---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1998 11:09:12 +1200
From: janice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: UN Report: Consumption Gap is widening.

Title: DEVELOPMENT: Consumption Gap Is Widening, Says UN Report

By Farhan Haq

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 9 (IPS) - World consumption has swelled to 24
trillion dollars a year, resulting in huge disparities between
North and South and widening gaps between wealthy shoppers and the
hungry poor in every nation, says the new 'Human Development
Report' published by the UN Development Programme (UNDP).

The total amount consumed worldwide in 1998 is six times the
1950 level and 16 times what it was at the beginning of the
century, says the report, published Wednesday.

Worse, the poorest fifth of the world's population -- or more
than one billion people -- have been left out of the consumption
explosion, the study adds, lacking food and water even as sales of
cars and televisions skyrocket.

''Abundance of consumption is no crime, but it is scandalous
that the poor are unable to consume enough to meet even their most
basic needs,'' UNDP Administrator James Gustave Speth says.

On the one hand, the number of radios sold in Africa has surged
by more than 400 percent between 1975 and 1995, while sales of
television sets in Latin America, and of cars in East Asia, have
jumped by 500 percent and 1,400 percent, respectively, in that
same period.

Since 1960, global fresh water consumption has doubled and the
size of the marine catch has increased four-fold, while fossil
fuel consumption has quintupled since 1950, the report adds.

On the other hand, it argues, most of the 4.4 billion people
who live in the developing world still lack the essentials of life
even as wealthy elites acquire the taste for cars and  personal
computers.

Three-fifths of the developing world's population lack basic
sanitation, nearly a third do without safe drinking water, a
quarter have inadequate or no housing, and a fifth lack modern
health services, the report estimates.

The report, the latest in a series published by UNDP since
1990, sharply criticises the inequalities in consumption within
and among countries.

The people living in the world's richest countries are only a
fifth of its population, the report says, but account for 45
percent of all meat and fish consumption, 58 percent of total
energy use, 84 percent of all paper usage and 87 percent of
vehicle ownership.

Despite such riches, the report adds, the industrialised world
has shocking amounts of poverty, with more than 100 million
people -- or about a tenth of its inhabitants -- living below the
poverty line, an equivalent number homeless and at least 37
million people unemployed. The lesson, Speth says, is that ''more
is not invariably better''.

For this report, UNDP has devised a human poverty index (called
HPI-2) suited for the industrialised world -- comprising the
percentage of the population likely to die before the age of 60,
the percentage of functionally illiterate people, the proportion
of people whose income is less than half the national median and
the percentage of long-term unemployment.

Based on those standards, the report concludes that poverty in
the North affects between 7 percent (in Sweden) and 17 percent (in
the United States) of the population.

Along with the United States, Spain (13 percent), Britain and
Ireland (both 15 percent) have large populations living in
poverty, while Sweden and the Netherlands (8 percent) are the only
Northern countries whose poor comprise fewer than a tenth of their
population.

If so many people in the consumption-heavy North fare so
poorly, the poor in the South fare still worse. According to the
report, the three richest people in the world own assets in excess
of the gross domestic products (GDPs) of the world's 48 poorest
countries put together.

While industrialised nations can boast 405 cars for every
1,000 people, the ratio of automobiles to people in sub-Saharan
Africa is 11 per 1,000, and in South Asia and East Asia, 5 per
1,000. The United States has 600 telephone lines for every 1,000
people, while Cambodia only provides one for the same number.

Meanwhile, the expanding demand for goods in the North puts a
strain on the South when it comes to providing even basic food
for its people. Growing fish consumption in the industrialised
countries, the report notes, leads the South to export fish even
though it is often the main source of protein for the world's
poorest people.

Partly as a result of this, protein consumption  can vary from
as high as 115 grammes a day for a French citizen to just 32
grammes a day for a Mozambican.

''Consumers, civil society and governments must forge alliances
for new patterns of consumption,'' says Richard Jolly, the
report's principal author.

''The world needs patterns of consumption that share resources,
not divide societies; ...that  are socially responsible, not
destructive of the well-being of others; that are sustainable and
do not degrade the natural resource base and environment for
present and future generations,'' he says.

The report argues that consumption levels for the world's
poorest people must be raised and that consumption patterns be
made more equal and more environmentally sustainable.

Meanwhile, it adds, consumers must be informed better about the
real costs of consumption, and about product safety and access to
real needs. Currently, the world is awash in advertising --  which
costs at least 435 billion dollars worldwide.

Yet, although the average US television-watcher sees 150,000
advertisements during his or her life, consumers often lack
information about the impact the things they buy have on their
health, the environment or on other people's well-being, says
Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, director of the UNDP Human Development Report
Office.

''Consumers need information that is strengthening,'' Fukuda-
Parr argues. ''They need to be able to identify those goods and
services that take minimal toll on the environment, that are
produced by labourers who are not exploited, that are not harmful
to people's health. Studies have shown that European consumers are
willing to pay 5 to 10 percent more for products that are
environmentally responsible.''

Like previous reports, this year's edition features a ranking
of nations by theie Human Development Index (HDI), which
aggregates national GDPs, life expectancy at birth and adult
literacy.

Canada, for many years the leading nation in HDI, again heads
the 1998 rankings, followed by France, Norway, the United States
and Iceland. The fifteen nations with the worst HDIs are all from
sub-Saharan Africa, with war-ravaged Sierra Leone dead last.

When the rankings are adjusted for gender disparities, Canada
still leads, but is followed by Norway, Sweden, Iceland and
Finland. Some nations' standings drop precipitously when gender is
accounted for: Japan, eighth-best in HDI, drops to 13th in gender-
related development; Chile goes from 31st to 46th; and Saudi
Arabia plummets from 70th to 102nd. (end/ips/fah/kb/98)

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