A REVIEW OF NATIONAL SOCIAL POLICIES. Myanmar

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "A REVIEW OF NATIONAL SOCIAL POLICIES. Myanmar"

Transcription

1 Page 1 of 13 Regional Environmental Technical Assistance 5771 Poverty Reduction & Environmental Management in Remote Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Watersheds Project (Phase I) A REVIEW OF NATIONAL SOCIAL POLICIES Myanmar By John V. Dennis, Ph.D Social Anthropologist TABLE OF CONTENTS Abbreviations 2 1 Introduction 3 2 A Brief Political History of Myanmar since Independence Parliamentary Government Military Rule Democracy Movement and the SLORC The SLORC to the SPDC 6 Table 2: Foreign direct investment, FY 89/90-95/96 (in millions of current US dollars ) 6 3 SPDC Policy on Poverty Alleviation 7 Table 3: Trends in key human development indicators, Increasing Impoverishment Social Exclusion 9 4 SPDC Policy on Education 4.1 Introduction 9 Table 5: School, Staff and Students under Border Area Development Programme ( to ) 9

2 Page 2 of 13 Table 6: Basic Education Expenditure ( to ) Education Expenditure 10 Table 8: Relative expenditures on defense, health, and education (% of GDP) 11 5 SPDC Policy on Health 11 6 SPDC Policy on Ethnic Minorities 14 7 Environment/Watershed Management Introduction 15 Table 9 Land use and deforestation 15 Table 10 Access to safe water Watershed Management 17 8 Conclusions and Recommendations 17 9 References Cited 19 ABBREVIATIONS AFPFL BSPP GDP GOM HDI NLD RC SLORC SPDC UNDP Anti-fascist People s Freedom League Burma Socialist Programme Party Gross Domestic Product Government of Myanmar Human Development Index of the UNDP National League for Democracy Revolutionary Council The State Law and Order Restoration Council The State Peace and Development Council United Nations Development Programme 1. Introduction This paper is an attempt to comprehensively review the current state of poverty and the poverty reduction policy in Myanmar with an emphasis on the following four areas: Education, Health, Ethnic Minorities, and Environment (Watershed Management). The transition from a development program based on isolationism and self-sufficiency to a market driven economy has great potential for growth and development. For instance, the revival and liberalization of economic activities in Myanmar since 1988 has spurred substantial real growth. However, the implementation of economic reforms has been slow and uneven. Moreover, the expansion in economic activity since 1988 also has not resulted in significant improvements in the living conditions of people. In 1994, Myanmar with a Human Development Index (HDI) value of fell in the category of "low human development" countries and ranked 131 out of 175 countries. Table 1: Real GDP per capita in selected countries in US dollars,1994 Myanmar 1,051 Cambodia 1,084 Viet Nam 1,208 Lao PDR 2,484 Philippines 2,681 Indonesia 3,740

3 Page 3 of 13 Thailand 7,104 Malaysia 8,865 Singapore 20,987 Myanmar s current efforts in implementing development projects to improve the conditions for the poor and those of vulnerable groups, have both positive and negative aspects. On the positive side, Myanmar has been inducted into the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), enabling the country to participate in mainstream regional economy and to achieve higher economic growth rates. Yet, economic growth has not been translated into significant improvement in the conditions of the poor, and of the remote regions. In addition, uncertainties in the political climate of the country have exacerbated the slow rate of national development and have discouraged potential external partners. Finally, economic growth in Myanmar, like in many other countries, has entailed negative environmental impacts. 2. A Brief Political History of Myanmar since Independence 2.1 Parliamentary Government The period following Myanmar s independence, granted on January 4th, 1948, is marked by widespread civil unrest, war, and insurgency. The Communist Party of Burma (CPB) launched an offensive against the Antifascist People s Freedom League (AFPFL) almost immediately after independence, and revolts were led by several ethnic minorities. At the same time, Kuomintang (Nationalist Chinese) forces fleeing from the Communist victory in China invaded Burma and began participating in the local wars and the illegal opium trade. Although the Tatmadaw, the newly created Burmese army, led by General Ne Win was unable to put an end to the war, it managed to regain parts of Myanmar s the heartland in 1950 and Despite the burden of protecting the union, the Government of Myanmar (GOM) sought to rebuild and industrialize its war-torn economy. By the end of the parliamentary period, Myanmar s agriculture and mining were on their way to recovery and some economic developments had been made. However, the GOM had minimal success in national development because it refused most foreign aid, which it claimed conflicted with its non-aligned foreign policy. Just when the insurrections seemed to subside, the governing AFPFL leaders split, causing a political crisis. Prime Minister U Nu resigned after requesting the parliament to appoint General Ne Win as the new temporary leader of the government until free and fair elections could be held. Although the elections returned U Nu to power in 1960, he was overthrown two years later by a military coup in which Ne Win seized power. 2.2 Military Rule The military came to power in March 1962, and ruled either directly through the Revolutionary Council (RC) or indirectly by a constitutional dictatorship. In July, 1962, the army-controlled Burma Socialist Programme Party (BSPP) was formed, the only party allowed in the new, Tatmadaw-imposed one-party system that was outlined in its policy statement, The Burmese Way to Socialism (Fredholm, 1993, p.49). The BSPP was created as a parallel, quasi-civilian administration closely following the organization of the Tatmadaw. The RC was determined to create a socialist society. Trade unions were disbanded, and in their place, the RC set up new worker and farmer organizations under its leadership. The private business sector was to a large extent nationalized, and serving or retired military officers were put in charge of the various industries. By the early 1970 s, the RC had nationalized all major economic enterprises except agriculture, small-scale trading and minor services. Likewise, the civil service was purged and put completely under military leadership. The strict neutral foreign policy of non-alignment that Myanmar had followed since independence was replaced after the 1962 coup, with a policy of self-imposed isolation from the rest of the world. Myanmar was completely closed to the outside world, with the government in control of all communications and education and travel abroad prohibited for all except the military elite. Tourism was also discouraged, by admitting foreigners at first only on twenty-four-hour, and later, seven-day visas. During the twenty-six years of uninterrupted military rule from 1962 to 1988, Myanmar sank deeper and deeper into economic bankruptcy, resulting in an ever-increasing inflation, a stagnant or decreasing standard of living, and a general lack of development. Although the GOM sought to improve the economy by concentrating on

4 Page 4 of 13 agriculture and the export of raw materials, the reliance on inexperienced soldiers to administer government programmes was in part responsible for the deterioration of the national economy. The BSPP administrators had neither the experience nor training for the highly-centralized system of economic planning that Ne Win introduced. For instance, while the output of paddy rose, poor milling and storage kept the rice from commanding prices in the world market equal to those received by neighboring Thailand. Myanmar s oil production rose for a few years, but the wells were exhausted and no new ones were developed, causing the output to decline below minimum needs. Burma s failure to achieve economic development was also due to GOM s refusal to accept foreign assistance and the continued civil war. While Myanmar accepted aid from Japan, West Germany, and a few other states, it would not allow foreign private firms to either enter independently or participate in joint ventures. Aid went for agriculture and infrastructure, but not for industrial and commercial development; thus, Myanmar was left dependent on foreign sources to satisfy its needs for manufactured goods. As the warfare increased, the RC diverted its scarce resources, both human and material, from economic development. The military attempted to resolve the civil war first by inviting those in revolt to discuss a solution, and then by military action. However, the military was unable to defeat the minorities, but neither could the minorities win. 2.3 Democracy Movement and the SLORC By 1987, Myanmar s ever deteriorating national economy reached a new low and Ne Win announced that the socialist system was not working and called for reforms, starting with some private domestic trade in paddy. In the subsequent demonetization of the national currency, the BSPP took nearly 80% of the currency out of circulation without replacement provoking considerable protest. By June, student demonstrations and policemilitary responses, together with public demonstrations over rice shortages and high prices, had provoked riots and initiated martial law in several areas. By July, Ne Win formally resigned from the chairmanship of the BSPP. The revolt against the military government continued until September 1988, when General Saw Maung and the national army staged a military coup, resulting in bloodshed and killings unprecedented in the modern history of Myanmar. As many as 3,000 unarmed demonstrators are believed to have been killed. The State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC), a 19-member military junta with General Saw Maung as the chairman, was created in order to dismantle the socialist economy and political system of its predecessors. The SLORC adopted an approach to development that envisioned an open-door market economy of growth and prosperity under the control and management of a top-down "strong or hard state" (Fredholm, 1993). In addition, in order to quell the continued public protest against the military rule and halt the democracy movement, the SLORC introduced a multiparty democratic system and held a multiparty election. Although the National League for Democracy (NLD) led by Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi who was put under house arrest in July 1989 won the election in a landslide victory of 80% of the constituencies, SLORC refused to honor the election result. After the May 1990 election, the SLORC sought to subdue NLD leaders, hundreds of elected NLD candidates, thousands of dissident students and other dissidents by enforcing hundreds of draconian orders and martial laws. 2.4 The SLORC to the SPDC In November 1997, the SLORC was dissolved and a 19-member junta entitled the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) was created. This transformation, once viewed with a certain degree of optimism by the international community hoping that the much-needed reforms would take place, now appears to be viewed as an instrument for enticing foreign exchange. Like its predecessor, the SPDC seems fundamentally opposed to holding substantive dialogue with the NLD and has failed to reform and restructure the economy. Prior to the transformation from the SLORC to the SPDC, Burma was inducted into the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in July Yet, despite its entry into ASEAN, the inflow of foreign direct investments into Burma has not increased. (See Table 2.) Table 2: Foreign direct investment, FY 89/90-95/96 (in millions of current US dollars) GOM Fiscal Year 89/90 90/91 91/92 92/93 93/94 94/95 95/96 Total direct investment ,

5 Page 5 of 13 In fact, the effect of US government sanctions against new investments in Myanmar has become increasingly apparent as the other ASEAN member states now find themselves in need of halting the flight of foreign capital, attracting foreign investments, and securing financial aid from the West and international financial institutions to ward off a potential collapse of their economies. With the Asian financial crisis and the ASEAN economies engrossed in their own financial and economic problems, new investment from other ASEAN states remains unlikely in the short-term. Thus, the likelihood of new poverty reduction driven by foreign investment is not good. 3. SPDC Policy on Poverty Alleviation There is no official definition for an income poverty line in Myanmar, and therefore, there are no official estimates of the proportion of income poor living below the poverty line. The country s national planning documents do not mention the word poverty or discuss the conditions confronting poor people. The failure to identify the extent of income poverty perpetuates the neglect of the poor. Table 3: Trends in key human development indicators, Year Life expectancy at birth (years) Adult literacy rate (%) Real GDP per capita (Kyat) , , , ,492 Source: UNDP Human Development Report 1997 and Reviews of the Financial, Economic and Social Conditions, Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development, Government of Myanmar. 3.1 Increasing Impoverishment Agriculture employs nearly two-thirds of the country s labor force the same proportion as it did 25 years ago. Agriculture also plays an extremely dominant role in Myanmar s economy. In , it contributed 25% of the country s Gross Domestic Product. This proportion went up to 59% by Agricultural practices, however, remain traditional and out-dated; very few farmers have access to any forms of new technologies. According to the 1993 Agricultural Census, for instance: two-thirds of the rural population lived in households that did not have even three acres of land, which is the minimum size considered viable even for subsistence whereas 68% of the households cultivated rice, only around 36% undertook double-cropping only 2% of households used a tractor, less than 1% power tillers, and less than 5% used water pumps a large majority of households used ploughs and sickles. Most of the small farmers have no access to new varieties of seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, or credit. Any fulltime employment outside the seasonal planting and harvesting seasons remain difficult to find for landless laborers. Non-farm employment opportunities are very few. Land under cultivation has increased over the years. This increase came partly from multiple cropping and expanded irrigation, but also partly from increased deforestation. Normally, if irrigated area increases, so does yield. But this has not generally been the case. Of the 26 million acres planted for food crops in , nearly 20 million or over three out of every four acres had good crops whose yields were stagnant or dropping over the last decade. Only one acre out of six had crops whose yields outpaced the growth of population.

6 Page 6 of 13 Most of the farmers are engaged in subsistence agriculture. The low agricultural yields, lack of adequate price incentives, limited access to credit, forced quota sales of paddy at below market prices, poor transportation conditions, floods, rising fertilizer prices, and limited access to market have greatly reduced the profitability of agricultural productions. Should farm yields continue to stagnate or fall, it is inevitable that outputs and incomes will be further depressed, impoverishing even further several millions of farming families. Table 4: Average retail price of rice in Yangon (kyat/unit) Year First class Third class The State is another major employer in Myanmar. This includes the civil service, the police and defense services, schoolteachers, health workers, and a host of other functionaries in government service and the public sector. All such government employees receive fixed salaries from a minimum of 600 kyats (around US $1.8) to a maximum of 2,500 kyats (around US $7.5) a month. In addition, they have access to limited amounts of subsidized rice, transportation and gasoline, and other benefits in kind. However, there has been rampant inflation in the country. Retail consumer prices went up by 25% in 1995, 16% in 1996 and 34% in This has led to drastic reductions in the real incomes of such employees. Most consumers and even fixed income government employees, have been hard hit by the sharp rise in food prices. In 1986, a typical household in Yangon spent, on average, 65% of its income of good items; by 1994, this had gone up to 67%. The best quality rice was selling at 14 kyats per unit in Yangon during 1990 even then consumers were paying almost twice what they paid in By 1996, the same rice was selling for 78 kyats per unit. Even the price of low-grade rice consumed largely by the poor has increased almost sevenfold from 8 kyats per unit in 1988 to 54 kyats in This sharp increase in prices has impoverished government employees, as well as the self-employed working in the informal and the private sectors, contributing to a steady decline in living standards. An inevitable manifestation of this growing impoverishment of government employees is the associated increase in rentseeking behavior. The excessive regulations, controls, dual-pricing systems, price ceilings, quotas, and rationing have contributed to the growth of large parallel markets. It also has led to illegal trade and promoted corruption. This has adversely affected the government s capacity to mobilize resources for undertaking public investments to improve the quality of people s lives. For many, establishing a parallel source of income to supplement meagre salaries has become a way of life. 3.2 Social Exclusion There are several categories of people who have been excluded from receiving even the minimum support needed for a decent living. Among the most vulnerable and neglected groups are Myanmar s growing numbers of children living in especially difficult circumstances: those who are exploited laborers, abused or neglected, institutionalized, trafficked, victims of armed conflict of ethnic discrimination. Recent estimates suggest that about 4 million of the nation s 11.8 million children between the ages 6-16 work, if only part-time. Rural children are generally employed by their parents in an agricultural production, which tends to keep children away from school and prevent them from furthering their education. A growing number of children are also subject to exploitative labor, especially in urban areas. They work long hours for little or no pay in occupations that do not provide life skills or the possibility of an economically secure future occupations that tend to jeopardize their health and safety. Such occupations include work in domestic service, construction, mining, heavy industry and prostitution. Children are also used in duty labor, especially for portage and road construction. Among the most economically insecure people in Myanmar are those who have been compelled to relocate because of civil strife or infrastructure development. Most of the above are found living in the border States. Forced resettlement almost always results in greater economic hardship as the means of livelihood are usually connected to the old settlements.

7 Page 7 of SPDC Policy on Education 4.1 Introduction The SPDC Policy on Education has been to improve the education standards of the country by implementing "an education system which is equitable with the cultural, the traditional, the social values and in keeping with the economic system which will facilitate national development (Ministry of Defense 89)." In doing so, the SPDC has set objectives such as to enable every individual to acquire Basic Education, to develop knowledge including scientific and technical know-how needed for nation building, or to enable those who are working to pursue undergraduate and postgraduate courses and study while working. Table 5: School, Staff and Students under Border Area Development Programme ( to ) School Staff Student Table 6: Basic Education Expenditure ( to ) Expenditure (million kyats) As can be seen in the figure above, the expenditure on education, the number of teachers appointed, and the number of students enrolled in both Higher and Basic Education Sector increased. However, Human Development in Myanmar, a report issued by the United Nations Working Group in July 1998, maintains that the number of students enrolled in primary schools dropped from 5.89 million in to 5.14 million in Likewise, the number of primary school teachers dropped from 156,629 in to 154,062 in Several challenges face higher education as well. A major area of concern is technical education and advanced studies. In many instances, the curriculum is outdated. In other cases, the skills acquired in school, regular as well as vocational, are not relevant to the employment opportunities open to young persons. Unattractive salaries, decreasing privileges, and erosion in status have adversely affected teacher recruitment and motivation. Colleges and universities have been unable to attract and retain talented people into the teaching profession especially as an increasing number find employment either in the private sector or overseas. Due to recurring protests for expanded student rights, restructuring of the education system and demands for democracy, schools, colleges and universities have frequently been shut down for indefinite periods, thus resulting in frequent disruptions to the education system including a serious backlog of students entering college and delay in graduation. In an apparent response to the increasing pressure from the international and business communities concerned with the potential effects of the closure of educational institutions on the workforce capacity of the country the SPDC has tentatively taken steps towards reopening universities and colleges. For instance, the SPDC has been finalizing the relocations of university campuses to decentralize student populations. In January 1998, estimated students were arrested in a move to "sanitize" the student population of dissent, prior to reopening the universities and colleges. Today, almost all institutions remain closed, however. 4.2 Education Expenditure The SPDC allocate a relatively small amount of state expenditure in education. For example, the 1995 government budget shows that the combined expenditures on health, education, and welfare were one-third of the amount allocated to defense, which accounted for 60% of the total expenditure of the central government.

8 Page 8 of 13 In addition, there has been a reduction in the allocation to education. Education expenditure went from 2.6% of GDP in to 1.1% in Table 7: Military spending in selected countries (as % of combined education and health expenditure) percent Myanmar 222 India 65 Indonesia 49 Philippines 41 Malaysia 38 Table 8: Relative expenditures on defense, health, and education (% of GDP) health Education Defense The impact of reduced spending by the government is felt throughout the education sector. There are growing problems of enrolment, retention and quality of education. The dropout rates remain high, and the system remains inefficient. Several studies point to the lack of proper school buildings, inadequate teaching materials, low teacher motivation and poor salaries, and ineffective teacher training that constrain the learning achievements of children. Even in regions where enrolment rates are high and dropout rates are low, many children do not acquire minimum levels of learning. 5. SPDC Policy on Health As in the past, the health system remains primarily public. State and cooperative hospitals, medical services, and personnel provide greater access for the general population to health care services whereas private physicians and medical practitioners continue to play an important role in providing better quality health care to the public. The SPDC has taken a number of new initiatives with respect to the development of communitybased health care system and organizations, acceptance of certain non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and increased cooperation with different UN agencies for upgrading the health standards. Although the privatization process is at an early stage in Myanmar, there is an increasing number of private clinics and hospitals. Furthermore, in order to educate and provide health care to the rural populace, 33 hospitals and 71 dispensaries have been opened from 1989 to this day in border areas. Population coverage by basic health services has expanded from 211 townships to all townships (320) in the country. These improvements have facilitated significant progress in some areas of health care. For example, by 1997, almost 78% of children were fully immunized and use of Oral Rehydration Therapy to treat diarrhea in children was estimated at 95%. Access to prenatal care, information and utilization of contraceptives for family planning purposes also increased sharply between 1991 and Despite these steps taken by the SPDC to improve the standard of health care in the country, they have not met the health needs of the country. There has been a declining trend in life expectancy gains since Preliminary data from the 1997 Multiple Indicator Survey (MICS) suggest that approximately 39% of children under five are malnourished of whom one third are severely malnourished. The maternal mortality is high in most parts of the country, although the available estimates vary widely. Maternal Mortality Survey (1994) estimated a national figure of 232 per 100,000 whereas WHO-UNICEF global estimates suggest a figure of 580 per 100,000.

9 Page 9 of 13 Currently, an estimated 64% of the general population have access to public heath care services and one Rural Health Centre serves an average of 20,000 people. Insufficient financial and foreign exchange sources has meant that many health centers remain poorly equipped and with inadequate supplies of essential drugs. A shortage of raw materials and energy to operate all factories of state enterprises, including the Myanmar Pharmaceutical Industry (BPI), has caused a greater reliance on the import of medical supplies and drugs. Consequently, the cost of health care has risen as public hospitals and dispensaries can no longer provide adequate medicines and drugs produced by the BPI. Not only is this situation compounded by poor transportation, communications infrastructure, and migration of medical professionals outside the country, it is also exacerbated by the fact that almost 50% of the population do not have access to clean water or sanitation facilities. As a result, an increasing proportion of the population now uses the private health system. The HDIM suggests that as many as 69% of health visits are to private health care providers. However, the fees charged by private health care providers prevent many from seeking even basic health care services. Box 1. HIV/AIDS in Myanmar: Gradual acceptance of an accelerating threat When the first cases of HIV were recorded in 1987, no one believed that it was serious. Nevertheless, a multisectoral National AIDS Committee chaired by the Minister of Health was formed in 1989, and with the first Medium Term Plan for AIDS Prevention and Control (MTP-1) in 1990, a National AIDS Program (NAP) was created. A sentinel surveillance system was established covering 20 geographical sites monitoring HIV sero-prevalence rates among selected populations and is now increasingly affecting the general population. Using sentinel data from 1995, international technical experts estimated that there were around 350,000 infected people in the country. By mid- 1997, the estimate was placed at 500,000. Although the 1995 estimate of 350,000 infected was accepted for official publications in 1996, it has since been officially repudiated. Myanmar is particularly exposed to the risks along its borders with its five neighbors, each of which has large populations affect by HIV/AIDS. Internally, massive seasonal migration of workers from throughout the country to major mining areas, forestry operations, construction sites, fishing ports and back to their homes is an emerging factor contributing to HIV dissemination. Most officials and official campaign associate HIV/AIDS only with illicit sex and intravenous drug use. Notions of national ideals and moral standards appear to be at odds with people s actual behavior and practices. This ambivalence stems from stigmatizations of those infected with HIV, as well as the methods advocated for its prevention. Official support for efforts to promote condom awareness and use continue to be limited. Strategic interventions in Myanmar have also focused primarily on clinical capacities of government physicians. Awareness campaigns are based on general messages, such as blaming foreigners or scare tactics. "AIDS=Death" is seen on billboards throughout the country. Information and educational materials are limited to posters and stickers targeting mainstream, low-risk populations. Translation into minority languages has not been accompanied by pre-testing with targeted audiences. Resources available for the HIV/AIDS response have been limited. Government has also been reluctant to permit international NGOs to work in collaboration with indigenous community based organizations. Permits and permissions are difficult to obtain - even to access socially at-risk and vulnerable populations. Little support is available for behavioral research and assessing prevention interventions. Nor has social marketing, a crucial component in prevention efforts, been permitted to expand given the limited access to mass media channels. Equally significant, no current interventions directly target women whose only risk is marriage. Perhaps the greatest embarrassment, for donors and recipient alike, is that the national blood safety remains unsecured. Currently less than 50% of the national blood supply is screened for HIV. Source:United Nations Working Group. Human Development in Myanmar, Yangon, July 1998, p SPDC Policy on Ethnic Minorities There are over 65 different ethnic groups in Myanmar officially recognized and clustered into seven "national" races: Shan, Mon, Karen (Kayin), Kayah, Chin, Kachin and Rakhine. Altogether, there are over 135 ethnic groups speaking more than 100 different languages and dialects. Myanmar s diverse ethnic groups are unevenly distributed throughout the country. However, the Myanmarns, the dominant ethnic group, are the majority in the central lowlands while the ethnic minorities are the majority in the border States. Although Myanmar s history has been characterized by ethnic pluralism and insurgency, the SLORC declared

10 Page 10 of 13 a unilateral cease-fire in April 1992 and sought to negotiate peace treaties with ethnic minorities. As a result, 16 armed underground minority groups entered into an agreement with the government with the goal to attain national unity. Due to the prolonged insurgency, ethnic minorities inhabiting the border States of Myanmar have received minimal attention and development support from the government. To alleviate the situation, the government has implemented development projects under the direction of the ministry of Development of Border Areas and National Races, that focus on economic infrastructure such as roads and bridges; energy; construction and telecommunications; and social infrastructure such as education, health, public relations (Ministry of Defense 223). The construction of roads and bridges was meant to facilitate transportation within the project areas and between the neighboring areas so as to encourage economic activities based on border trade and thereby give rise to job opportunities. A total of 1, million kyats amounting to 27.7% of the allotted funds for the fiscal year was spent on the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges. Agricultural objectives included the following: sufficiency in food supplies for all the national groups of the border areas increase in the cultivation and production of rice and other crops choice of crops that best suit the area utilization of modern agricultural methods attainment of better living standards through increased income from crops In order to raise the educational standard of the residents of the border areas and to upgrade vocational education, more Basic Education Schools were opened, short courses for teaching staff were held, teaching aids were provided, and domestic science schools and youth training schools were established (see table 5). Because of the literary and linguistic influences of the neighboring countries, languages besides Myanmar, such as Chinese, was often used as the language of instruction. In administering better and more extensive health care, the government encountered problems with insufficient staff strength in addition to linguistic problems. By the time the health personnel had acquired the local language to a reasonable degree, they were transferred to other assignments. Medicine, health facilities, up-todate medical equipment and specialists are still in short supply. In some areas, the local people relied more on medical facilities across the border than those opened by the government. Furthermore, the number of hospitals and dispensaries opened falls short of the number planned. Despite the implementation of the SPDC s Border Areas Development Programme, progress in many areas has been slow. In addition, the development of self-administered zones written by the National Convention does not appear to fulfill the needs of the ethnic minorities (Janelle Diller in Burma: The Challenge of Change). On the surface, these self-administered zones would grant fuller autonomy to certain minorities. Yet, the government has proposed that a self-administered zone must have at least two townships with one distinct racial or ethnic group holding a majority in each township and comprising at least half of the population of the total township. Thus, no ethnic group with its own state can qualify for self-administration in another state. Moreover, even if local autonomy is granted to the ethnic minorities in self-administered zones, they will not have any power at the national level. 7. Environment/Watershed Management 7.1 Introduction Since the SLORC came to power in 1988, the floodgates of environmental degradation have opened on Myanmar. Despite the foreign exchange, the country s natural resources have been sold at an alarming rate. Critical environmental issues are being raised.

11 Page 11 of 13 Table 9: Land use and deforestation Land area Rural population density Annual deforestation Thousand sq. km 1994 Share arable % 1994 People per sq. km 1994 % change Myanmar Table 10: Access to safe water Urban % of population Rural % of population Myanmar The threats to Myanmar s environment are legion. Of immediate concern are over-fishing, mining and deforestation, massive dam-building and hydroelectric projects, as well as gas pipelines and the growing influx of Western oil companies. Once a net exporter of oil, Myanmar is no longer even self-sufficient. Moreover, the sudden arrival of multinational corporations sparks questions over the rights of indigenous peoples to their land, and of all citizens to participation in the decision-making process. Many unique species of flora and fauna are also in danger of extinction in some of Asia s last undisturbed forest and coastal habitats. The most visible threat to Myanmar s environment today is the rapid depletion of many of the country s forests which enjoy extraordinary bio-diversity ranging from montane and deciduous hardwoods to tropical rainforests and the world s largest remaining teak forests. From an estimated forest cover of 500,000 square kilometers or 70% of Myanmar s total land area in 1948, most independent estimates indicate that only 30% of the country is still covered with forest today, and declining fast. Rainforest Action Network, for example, has calculated Myanmar s annual deforestation rate at 800,000 to one million hectares a year, one of the five highest in the world. Poverty, high taxation, and government resettlement programmes only contribute to the pressures on citizens to fell more trees, clear land and degrade their own environments for their own immediate survival. In addition, since 1988, Myanmar has become the world s largest producer of illicit opium and heroin with an annual crop of over 2,000 tons. Each year even more of the region s quickly diminishing forests are cut down by loggers or slash-and-burn hill farmers planting their next crop of poppy seeds. According to World Bank estimates, over 75% of Myanmar s energy needs are met through the fuel obtained from wood and charcoal, which places an ever greater burden on the country s rapidly depleting forests. Consequently, proposals for the construction of new power stations have been raised. Together with the growing pressure to develop pipelines and dams, many border regions, which enjoy the country s remaining wildlife and nature reserves, have been threatened. Since SLORC opened up the waters of the Andaman Sea to foreign fishing concessions, there has been a steady flow of boats coming to harvest the ocean. Despite limits written into such concession agreements, the large foreign vessels sail unchecked and fish freely beyond their allotted area, right up to the coast. Inhabitants of the Mergui island, totally dependent upon fishing for a living, report that catches have dwindled from a regular Kg. per day in 1991 to 3-5Kg. at present. (Karen National Union, 1995,p. 32) Underwater sea plants such as coral are destroyed by heavy trawling nets or decimated by the use of explosives. The coral is an essential haven for the many diverse sea plankton and micro-species that form the lowest levels of the food chain. With the seabed swept clean of coral, Andaman Sea has become a barren desert with larger species of fish migrating elsewhere or simply dying out. The SPDC has recognized the need for sustainable development and environmental conservation and protection. Recently, it enacted a number of legislation such as the Marine Fisheries Law and Pesticide Law. However, law enforcement and the limited availability of trained technical personnel involved in developing and managing environmental programmes have been identified as constraints that need to be overcome for effective implementation of these programmes. 7.2 Watershed Management Apart from the areas in the Irrawady delta, Sittaung valley, Irrawady valley, and Chindwin valley, the major part

12 Page 12 of 13 of the country area is hilly. There exist complex socioeconomic issues in the upland areas, which are important watershed areas of major river systems and dams for hydropower and agriculture. In many important watershed areas along the Thai and Chinese borders, the environmental situation is critical. It is precisely in these remote and previously undisturbed border regions that many of the most ecologically important reserves remain. A number of these same forest areas now face the additional threat of the construction of hydroelectric dams and gas-pipelines. The government has sought to implement soil conservation and watershed management projects by providing incentives to community-based organizations in order to encourage grass-root participation. The incentives, such as loans, free fertilizers, farming implements, improved variety of seeds, and pesticides were designed to help the villages establish community forest plantations, with little or no additional cost to the villages as the government projects financed its implementation costs. Additional incentives were given depending on the participation of the people. Despite government s efforts, there still exist a number of problems that are associated with the management of watersheds in Myanmar. First of all, the extension services regarding participatory watershed management are inadequate, and the staff involved in the management of watersheds has limited technical skills and knowledge. The steady increase in population with limited arable agricultural land is threatening the stability of the watershed basins. In addition, due to the lack of a well-defined land use policy for the whole country, conservation and preservation of watershed forest and plantations are not adequate. 8. Conclusions and Recommendations In conclusion, it may be said that the economic reforms in Myanmar have made some progress in contributing to the country s growth and recovery. Yet, each reform measure entails other supportive measures, including institutional changes, in a logical and coherent manner. For example, for marketization to be effective it needs to be supported by a strong legal framework and a stable environment. Formulation and implementation of a development strategy that ensures both sustained growth and an equitable expansion of opportunities economic, social, cultural and political will accelerate the development process. At the same time, Myanmar needs to take steps towards establishing a society where income and employment opportunities expand rapidly, where children have universal access to quality education, where everyone has access to proper and affordable health care, where communities are encouraged to actively participate in shaping their own futures, where socially disadvantaged groups and ethnic minorities are fully integrated into the development process, and where governance is based on people s representation. Recommendations to improve the development process. 9. References Cited Altsean Burma, Alternative Asean Network on Burma, Report Card: Slorc s Performance as the State Peace & Development Council. Bangkok. American Embassy Rangoon, Foreign Economic Trends Report: Burma, Rangoon. Carey, Peter (editor) Burma: The Challenge of Change in a Divided Society. Edited by Peter Carey. London: Macmillan Press. Diller, Janelle. Burma: The Challenge of Change. Fredholm, Michael Burma: Ethnicity and Insurgency. Westport, CT: Praeger. Government of Myanmar. Ministry of Defense Office of Strategic Studies. Human Resource Development and Nation Building in Myanmar. Yangon: Ministry of Defense Symposium of Socio-economic Factors Contributing to National Consolidation. Yangon: Ministry of Defense.

13 Page 13 of 13 Karen National Union The Rape of the Rural Poor: Continued Abuses of State Power in Tenasserim Division, Burma Concomitant Effects on the Environment and the Very Substance of Rural Communities in the Region. A Special Report of Karen National Union. Mergui: Karen National Union. Maung, Mya The Burma Road to Capitalism: Economic Growth versus Democracy. Westport, CT: Praeger. Maw Than, U. and Daw Nyunt Nyunt Swe The State of Myanmar Economy. Yangon: Yangon Institute of Economics. Smith, Martin Paradise Lost? The Suppression of Environmental Rights and Freedom of Expression in Burma. London: Article 19, The International Centre Against Censorship. United Nations Working Group. July Human Development in Myanmar. Zaw Win, U Historical and Current Experiences of Watershed Management in Myanmar with Particular Emphasis on the Shan State. Myanmar: Ministry of Forestry, Forest Department.

Historical Background

Historical Background 28 HRDU Historical Background Constitutional Period (1947-62) On January 4, 1947, Burma gained its independence from the British who, in the 19th century, had fought three wars against the Burman Empire

More information

Case Study on Youth Issues: Philippines

Case Study on Youth Issues: Philippines Case Study on Youth Issues: Philippines Introduction The Philippines has one of the largest populations of the ASEAN member states, with 105 million inhabitants, surpassed only by Indonesia. It also has

More information

HUMAN RIGHTS YEARBOOK : BURMA

HUMAN RIGHTS YEARBOOK : BURMA Message of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Nobel Laureate General Secretary, National League for Democracy, Burma to the 56 th Session of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights Geneva, March 2000 It is now

More information

Analysis on the status of the economic, social, cultural and environmental rights of people in Burma ( 2007 )

Analysis on the status of the economic, social, cultural and environmental rights of people in Burma ( 2007 ) L A W K A P A L A (C.4) Analysis on the status of the economic, social, cultural and environmental rights of people in Burma ( 2007 ) Introduction This report analyzes the extent to which the expansion

More information

The Human Face of the Financial Crisis

The Human Face of the Financial Crisis The Human Face of the Financial Crisis Prof. Leonor Magtolis Briones UP National College of Public Administration and Governance and Co-Convenor, Social Watch Philippines Fourth Annual Forum of Emerging

More information

Policy Brief on Migration and Urbanization

Policy Brief on Migration and Urbanization The Republic of the Union of Myanmar 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Policy Brief on Migration and Urbanization Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population With technical

More information

Rakhine State In Need of Fundamental Solutions

Rakhine State In Need of Fundamental Solutions Discussion Paper Prepared for Proximity Designs Myanmar February 24, 2017 (revised April 24, 2017) This policy note was written by David Dapice (David_Dapice@harvard.edu) following trips to the region

More information

Development Strategy. for. Myanmar

Development Strategy. for. Myanmar Development Strategy for Myanmar Masahiko Ebashi Myat Thein Contents 1. Present Status of the Economy 2. Characteristics of Current Economic Policies of Myanmar 3. Key Issues to be tackled a. Rural development

More information

THE HILL TRIBES OF NORTHERN THAILAND: DEVELOPMENT IN CONFLICT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS - REPORT OF A VISIT IN SEPTEMBER 1996

THE HILL TRIBES OF NORTHERN THAILAND: DEVELOPMENT IN CONFLICT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS - REPORT OF A VISIT IN SEPTEMBER 1996 THE HILL TRIBES OF NORTHERN THAILAND: DEVELOPMENT IN CONFLICT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS - REPORT OF A VISIT IN SEPTEMBER 1996 Contents Summary A background Perceptions, prejudice and policy Cards and identity

More information

Law, Justice and Development Program

Law, Justice and Development Program Law, Justice and Development Program ADB Regional Capacity Development Technical Assistance Strengthening Capacity for Environmental Law in the Asia-Pacific: Developing Environmental Law Champions Train-the-Trainers

More information

Indonesia: Enhanced Water Security Investment Project

Indonesia: Enhanced Water Security Investment Project Initial Poverty and Social Analysis March 2018 Indonesia: Enhanced Water Security Investment Project This document is being disclosed to the public in accordance with ADB s Public Communications Policy

More information

COUNTRY REPORT OF THE ASEAN ASSESSMENT ON THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: MYANMAR

COUNTRY REPORT OF THE ASEAN ASSESSMENT ON THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: MYANMAR COUNTRY REPORT OF THE ASEAN ASSESSMENT ON THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: MYANMAR with the support of: This volume is a product resulting from a project jointly implemented by the staff

More information

Poverty Profile. Executive Summary. Kingdom of Thailand

Poverty Profile. Executive Summary. Kingdom of Thailand Poverty Profile Executive Summary Kingdom of Thailand February 2001 Japan Bank for International Cooperation Chapter 1 Poverty in Thailand 1-1 Poverty Line The definition of poverty and methods for calculating

More information

The health care situation of Burmese migrants in Thailand - Access to HIV prevention, treatment and care

The health care situation of Burmese migrants in Thailand - Access to HIV prevention, treatment and care The health care situation of Burmese migrants in Thailand - Access to HIV prevention, treatment and care An interview with Brahm Press, working for Raks Thai Foundation, a member of CARE International

More information

Lanna Culture and Social Development:

Lanna Culture and Social Development: Lanna Culture and Social Development: A Case Study of Chiangmai Province in Northern Thailand 1. Introduction By Phaisal Lekuthai Thailand is situated in the Southeast Asian mainland, the latitude 6-21

More information

UNDERSTANDING TRADE, DEVELOPMENT, AND POVERTY REDUCTION

UNDERSTANDING TRADE, DEVELOPMENT, AND POVERTY REDUCTION ` UNDERSTANDING TRADE, DEVELOPMENT, AND POVERTY REDUCTION ECONOMIC INSTITUTE of CAMBODIA What Does This Handbook Talk About? Introduction Defining Trade Defining Development Defining Poverty Reduction

More information

Mekong Youth Assembly and International Rivers submission to John Knox, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment

Mekong Youth Assembly and International Rivers submission to John Knox, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment Mekong Youth Assembly Mekong Youth Assembly and International Rivers submission to John Knox, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment The Mekong Youth Assembly and International

More information

This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore.

This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore. This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore. Title Economic growth and social well-being : Thailand's case Author(s) Petchsingh, Trirat. Citation Petchsingh,

More information

Under-five chronic malnutrition rate is critical (43%) and acute malnutrition rate is high (9%) with some areas above the critical thresholds.

Under-five chronic malnutrition rate is critical (43%) and acute malnutrition rate is high (9%) with some areas above the critical thresholds. May 2014 Fighting Hunger Worldwide Democratic Republic of Congo: is economic recovery benefiting the vulnerable? Special Focus DRC DRC Economic growth has been moderately high in DRC over the last decade,

More information

STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Fewer & Older: The Coming Population and Demographic Challenges in Rural Newfoundland & Labrador

STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Fewer & Older: The Coming Population and Demographic Challenges in Rural Newfoundland & Labrador STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Fewer & Older: The Coming Population and Demographic Challenges in Rural Newfoundland & Labrador An Executive Summary 1 This paper has been prepared for the Strengthening Rural

More information

Poverty Profile. Executive Summary. Malaysia

Poverty Profile. Executive Summary. Malaysia Poverty Profile Executive Summary Malaysia February 2001 Japan Bank for International Cooperation Chapter 1 Poverty in Malaysia 1-1 Poverty Line Malaysia s poverty line, called Poverty Line Income (PLI),

More information

LDC Graduation: A Case of Cambodia

LDC Graduation: A Case of Cambodia LDC Graduation: A Case of Cambodia NOU Keosothea Asia-Pacific Regional Workshop on Graduation Strategies from the LDC Siem Reap 4-6 Dec 2013 Outline of Presentation 1. Review of Recent Development Trends

More information

IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON POVERTY: CASE STUDY OF PAKISTAN

IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON POVERTY: CASE STUDY OF PAKISTAN Romain Pison Prof. Kamal NYU 03/20/06 NYU-G-RP-A1 IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON POVERTY: CASE STUDY OF PAKISTAN INTRODUCTION The purpose of this paper is to examine the effect of globalization in Pakistan

More information

SUMMARY POVERTY REDUCTION AND SOCIAL STRATEGY

SUMMARY POVERTY REDUCTION AND SOCIAL STRATEGY Greater Mekong Subregion Tourism Infrastructure for Inclusive Growth Project (RRP CAM46293) SUMMARY POVERTY REDUCTION AND SOCIAL STRATEGY Country: Cambodia Project Title: Greater Mekong Subregion Tourism

More information

Trade, informality and jobs. Kee Beom Kim ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific

Trade, informality and jobs. Kee Beom Kim ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Trade, informality and jobs Kee Beom Kim ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Decent Work for All ASIAN DECENT WORK DECADE 2006-2015 Outline Introduction: Linkage between trade, jobs and informality

More information

TBC Strategy

TBC Strategy TBC Strategy 2 0 1 7-2 0 1 9 2 TBC Strategy 2017-2019 1 Strategy TBC Strategy is focused on This supporting the voluntary return, resettlement and reintegration of displaced communities from Burma/Myanmar

More information

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Shuji Uchikawa

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Shuji Uchikawa EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Shuji Uchikawa ASEAN member countries agreed to establish the ASEAN Economic Community by 2015 and transform ASEAN into a region with free movement of goods, services, investment, skilled

More information

Asia and the Pacific s Perspectives on the Post-2015 Development Agenda

Asia and the Pacific s Perspectives on the Post-2015 Development Agenda Ver: 2 Asia and the Pacific s Perspectives on the Post-2015 Development Agenda Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Executive Secretary United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) Bangkok

More information

Economic Development and Transition

Economic Development and Transition Economic Development and Transition Developed Nations and Less Developed Countries Developed Nations Developed nations are nations with higher average levels of material well-being. Less Developed Countries

More information

Pillars of Aid Human Resources Development and Nation-Building in Countries with Long and Close Relations with Japan

Pillars of Aid Human Resources Development and Nation-Building in Countries with Long and Close Relations with Japan Chapter 1 Asia 1 Southeast Asia Pillars of Aid Human Resources Development and Nation-Building in Countries with Long and Close Relations with Japan Southeast Asian countries and Japan have a long-established

More information

ILO STRATEGY FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION, REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY OF THE EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI-AFFECTED COUNTRIES IN ASIA

ILO STRATEGY FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION, REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY OF THE EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI-AFFECTED COUNTRIES IN ASIA 1 ILO STRATEGY FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION, REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY OF THE EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI-AFFECTED COUNTRIES IN ASIA THE BACKGROUND The UN Secretary-General described the December 26, 2004 catastrophe

More information

Policy Brief on Labour Force

Policy Brief on Labour Force The Republic of the Union of Myanmar 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Policy Brief on Labour Force Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population With technical assistance

More information

OUR SOUTHEAST ASIA POLICY

OUR SOUTHEAST ASIA POLICY OUR SOUTHEAST ASIA POLICY Ruth E. Bacon, Director Office of Regional Affairs Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs Department of State Southeast Asia is comprised of nine states: Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia,

More information

STRENGTHENING POLICY INSTITUTES IN MYANMAR

STRENGTHENING POLICY INSTITUTES IN MYANMAR STRENGTHENING POLICY INSTITUTES IN MYANMAR February 2016 This note considers how policy institutes can systematically and effectively support policy processes in Myanmar. Opportunities for improved policymaking

More information

Facts on Human Rights Violations in Burma 1997

Facts on Human Rights Violations in Burma 1997 42 HRDU Facts on Human Rights Violations in Burma 1997 1. Extra-judicial, Summary, or Arbitrary Executions 1.1. Background 1.2. Death in Custody 1.3. Massacres in Shan State 1.4. List of Incidents Extrajudicial

More information

DEVELOPMENT AID IN NORTHEAST ASIA

DEVELOPMENT AID IN NORTHEAST ASIA DEVELOPMENT AID IN NORTHEAST ASIA Sahiya Lhagva An Oven iew of Development Aid in Northeast Asia It is well known that Northeast Asia covers different economies which vary considerably in terms of economic

More information

A COMPARISON OF ARIZONA TO NATIONS OF COMPARABLE SIZE

A COMPARISON OF ARIZONA TO NATIONS OF COMPARABLE SIZE A COMPARISON OF ARIZONA TO NATIONS OF COMPARABLE SIZE A Report from the Office of the University Economist July 2009 Dennis Hoffman, Ph.D. Professor of Economics, University Economist, and Director, L.

More information

Employment opportunities and challenges in an increasingly integrated Asia and the Pacific

Employment opportunities and challenges in an increasingly integrated Asia and the Pacific Employment opportunities and challenges in an increasingly integrated Asia and the Pacific KEIS/WAPES Training on Dual Education System and Career Guidance Kee Beom Kim Employment Specialist ILO Bangkok

More information

Asia-Pacific to comprise two-thirds of global middle class by 2030, Report says

Asia-Pacific to comprise two-thirds of global middle class by 2030, Report says Strictly embargoed until 14 March 2013, 12:00 PM EDT (New York), 4:00 PM GMT (London) Asia-Pacific to comprise two-thirds of global middle class by 2030, Report says 2013 Human Development Report says

More information

More sustainable hunger eradication and poverty reduction in Vietnam

More sustainable hunger eradication and poverty reduction in Vietnam More sustainable hunger eradication and poverty reduction in Vietnam Vu Van Ninh* Eliminating hunger, reducing poverty, and improving the living conditions of the poor is not just a major consistent social

More information

Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator and Chair UN Development Group, remarks on The Sustainable Development Goals: Building a better future in Myanmar

Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator and Chair UN Development Group, remarks on The Sustainable Development Goals: Building a better future in Myanmar Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator and Chair UN Development Group, remarks on The Sustainable Development Goals: Building a better future in Myanmar Yangon University, Myanmar 2:00pm, August 7, 2017 [Suggested

More information

Assignment. "Economic Profile of Vietnam"

Assignment. Economic Profile of Vietnam PPG-525: Fundamental of Economics Assignment On "Economic Profile of Vietnam" Submitted to: Dr. Ahmed Tazmeen Department of Public Policy and Governance North South University Dhaka, Bangladesh Submitted

More information

Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the

Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the Commentary After the War: 25 Years of Economic Development in Vietnam by Bui Tat Thang Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the Vietnamese economy has entered a period of peaceful development. The current

More information

Human development in China. Dr Zhao Baige

Human development in China. Dr Zhao Baige Human development in China Dr Zhao Baige 19 Environment Twenty years ago I began my academic life as a researcher in Cambridge, and it is as an academic that I shall describe the progress China has made

More information

LESSON 4 The Miracle on the Han: Economic Currents

LESSON 4 The Miracle on the Han: Economic Currents The Miracle on the Han: Economic Currents Like other countries, Korea has experienced vast social, economic and political changes as it moved from an agricultural society to an industrial one. As a traditionally

More information

Chapter 5: Internationalization & Industrialization

Chapter 5: Internationalization & Industrialization Chapter 5: Internationalization & Industrialization Chapter 5: Internationalization & Industrialization... 1 5.1 THEORY OF INVESTMENT... 4 5.2 AN OPEN ECONOMY: IMPORT-EXPORT-LED GROWTH MODEL... 6 5.3 FOREIGN

More information

COUNTRY REPORT. by Andrei V. Sonin 1 st Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

COUNTRY REPORT. by Andrei V. Sonin 1 st Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Regional Workshop on Capacity-Building in Governance and Public Administration for Sustainable Development Thessaloniki, 29-31 July 2002 Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear colleagues, COUNTRY REPORT B E L A R

More information

Increasing Access to Health Services for those living in Border Areas in the GMS

Increasing Access to Health Services for those living in Border Areas in the GMS International Organization for Migration (IOM) Increasing Access to Health Services for those living in Border Areas in the GMS WHO Bi-regional Meeting on Healthy Borders in the Greater Mekong Sub-region

More information

Myanmar. Burmese government and many of the 135 ethnic groups in Myanmar such as the Kachin, Shan,

Myanmar. Burmese government and many of the 135 ethnic groups in Myanmar such as the Kachin, Shan, Myanmar Background: Myanmar, a country plagued with internal fighting for almost sixty years, is considered to be the world s longest running civil war. The root of the fighting is ethnic tensions between

More information

ACCELERATING GLOBAL ACTIONS FOR A WORLD WITHOUT POVERTY

ACCELERATING GLOBAL ACTIONS FOR A WORLD WITHOUT POVERTY ACCELERATING GLOBAL ACTIONS FOR A WORLD WITHOUT POVERTY Inter-agency Expert Group Meeting on Implementation of the Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (2018-2027) United Nations

More information

A/60/422. General Assembly. United Nations. Situation of human rights in Myanmar. Report of the Secretary-General.

A/60/422. General Assembly. United Nations. Situation of human rights in Myanmar. Report of the Secretary-General. United Nations General Assembly Distr.: General 10 October 2005 Original: English A/60/422 Sixtieth session Agenda item 7 (c) Human rights questions: human rights situations and reports of special rapporteurs

More information

Japan s Actions Towards Gender Mainstreaming with Human Security in Its Official Development Assistance

Japan s Actions Towards Gender Mainstreaming with Human Security in Its Official Development Assistance Japan s Actions Towards Gender Mainstreaming with Human Security in Its Official Development Assistance March, 2008 Global Issues Cooperation Division International Cooperation Bureau Ministry of Foreign

More information

Article 2These Regulations apply to the residents-resettlement for the Three Gorges Project construction.

Article 2These Regulations apply to the residents-resettlement for the Three Gorges Project construction. Regulations on Residents-Resettlement for the Yangtze River Three Gorges Project Construction (Adopted at the 35th Executive Meeting of the State Council on February 15, 2001, promulgated by Decree No.

More information

THE PRIME MINISTER HEREBY DECIDES:

THE PRIME MINISTER HEREBY DECIDES: THE PRIME MINISTER No: 286/2006/QĐ-TTg THE SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM Independence Freedom Happiness Hanoi, 27 December, 2006 DECISION on the Issuance of the National Program for the Promotion of Foreign

More information

DRIVERS OF DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE AND HOW THEY AFFECT THE PROVISION OF EDUCATION

DRIVERS OF DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE AND HOW THEY AFFECT THE PROVISION OF EDUCATION DRIVERS OF DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE AND HOW THEY AFFECT THE PROVISION OF EDUCATION This paper provides an overview of the different demographic drivers that determine population trends. It explains how the demographic

More information

THAILAND SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement

THAILAND SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement THAILAND SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement March 2016 Contents 1. Objectives of the Engagement 2. Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD) 3. Country Context 4. Growth Story 5. Poverty Story 6.

More information

Monitoring Country Progress in Pakistan

Monitoring Country Progress in Pakistan Monitoring Country Progress in Pakistan Program Office OAPA & USAID/Pakistan U.S. Agency for International Development Pakistan Institute for Development Economics September, 21 st, 211 Economic Reforms

More information

Kayah State CSO Forum (Aug 2014) Overall Objectives and Thematic Clusters:

Kayah State CSO Forum (Aug 2014) Overall Objectives and Thematic Clusters: Kayah State CSO Forum (Aug 2014) Overall Objectives and Thematic Clusters: Civil society let state level CSO forum was organized under the theme of CSO Role to Promote in Kayah State Building and related

More information

SUDAN MIDTERM REPORT IMPLEMENTATION OF UPR RECOMMENDATIONS

SUDAN MIDTERM REPORT IMPLEMENTATION OF UPR RECOMMENDATIONS Introduction: SUDAN MIDTERM REPORT IMPLEMENTATION OF UPR RECOMMENDATIONS Since the Universal Periodic Review in May 2011 significant developments occurred in Sudan, including the independence of the South

More information

Has Globalization Helped or Hindered Economic Development? (EA)

Has Globalization Helped or Hindered Economic Development? (EA) Has Globalization Helped or Hindered Economic Development? (EA) Most economists believe that globalization contributes to economic development by increasing trade and investment across borders. Economic

More information

Fourteen years after the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BH),

Fourteen years after the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BH), IDA at Work Bosnia and Herzegovina: From Post-Conflict Reconstruction to EU Integration Bosnia and Herzegovina has achieved an impressive post-conflict recovery. The challenge now is integration in Europe.

More information

Governing Body 331st Session, Geneva, 26 October 9 November 2017

Governing Body 331st Session, Geneva, 26 October 9 November 2017 INTERNATIONAL LABOUR OFFICE Governing Body 331st Session, Geneva, 26 October 9 November 2017 Institutional Section GB.331/INS/11 INS Date: 13 October 2017 Original: English ELEVENTH ITEM ON THE AGENDA

More information

Malaysia experienced rapid economic

Malaysia experienced rapid economic Trends in the regions Labour migration in Malaysia trade union views Private enterprise in the supply of migrant labour in Malaysia has put social standards at risk. The Government should extend its regulatory

More information

INCLUSIVE GROWTH AND POLICIES: THE ASIAN EXPERIENCE. Thangavel Palanivel Chief Economist for Asia-Pacific UNDP, New York

INCLUSIVE GROWTH AND POLICIES: THE ASIAN EXPERIENCE. Thangavel Palanivel Chief Economist for Asia-Pacific UNDP, New York INCLUSIVE GROWTH AND POLICIES: THE ASIAN EXPERIENCE Thangavel Palanivel Chief Economist for Asia-Pacific UNDP, New York Growth is Inclusive When It takes place in sectors in which the poor work (e.g.,

More information

CAMBODIA SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement

CAMBODIA SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement CAMBODIA SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement Nov Dec 2016 Contents Objectives of the Engagement Country Context Main research questions I. What are the challenges to sustaining economic growth?

More information

Southeast Asia: Violence, Economic Growth, and Democratization. April 9, 2015

Southeast Asia: Violence, Economic Growth, and Democratization. April 9, 2015 Southeast Asia: Violence, Economic Growth, and Democratization April 9, 2015 Review Is the Democratic People s Republic of Korea really a republic? Why has the economy of the DPRK fallen so far behind

More information

China s Economic Reform

China s Economic Reform China s Economic Reform Douglas J. Young January, 2010 Main Point Good Government Policy is crucial for Economic Development Ancient China Domesticated Rice and Millet (ca. 8,000 BC) Pioneered Irrigation,

More information

vi. rising InequalIty with high growth and falling Poverty

vi. rising InequalIty with high growth and falling Poverty 43 vi. rising InequalIty with high growth and falling Poverty Inequality is on the rise in several countries in East Asia, most notably in China. The good news is that poverty declined rapidly at the same

More information

CDP Working Group on Gender and Development Women s work and livelihood prospects in the context of the current economic crisis

CDP Working Group on Gender and Development Women s work and livelihood prospects in the context of the current economic crisis CDP Working Group on Gender and Development Women s work and livelihood prospects in the context of the current economic crisis Issues Note for the 2010 AMR The theme of the 2010 Annual Ministerial Review

More information

Realism Not Romanticism Should Dictate India s Pakistan Policy

Realism Not Romanticism Should Dictate India s Pakistan Policy IDSA COMMENT Realism Not Romanticism Should Dictate India s Pakistan Policy Namrata Goswami February 10, 2014 India has been working on plans of building economic corridors in Northeast India s neighborhood

More information

Contemporary Human Geography, 2e. Chapter 9. Development. Lectures. Karl Byrand, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan Pearson Education, Inc.

Contemporary Human Geography, 2e. Chapter 9. Development. Lectures. Karl Byrand, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan Pearson Education, Inc. Contemporary Human Geography, 2e Lectures Chapter 9 Development Karl Byrand, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan 9.1 Human Development Index Development The process of improving the material conditions of

More information

THAILAND IN MID-DECADE

THAILAND IN MID-DECADE THAILAND IN MID-DECADE WILL THE NEXT FIVE YEARS RESTORE POLITICAL STABILITY AND ECONOMIC PROSPERITY? CHRISTOPHER F. BRUTON DATACONSULT LTD. BANGKOK, THAILAND AMARI HOTEL, PHUKET THURSDAY 12 MARCH 2015

More information

Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run. Mark R. Rosenzweig. Harvard University. October 2003

Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run. Mark R. Rosenzweig. Harvard University. October 2003 Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run Mark R. Rosenzweig Harvard University October 2003 Prepared for the Conference on The Future of Globalization Yale University. October 10-11, 2003

More information

1. East Asia. the Mekong region; (ii) environment and climate change (launch of the A Decade toward the Green Mekong. Part III ch.

1. East Asia. the Mekong region; (ii) environment and climate change (launch of the A Decade toward the Green Mekong. Part III ch. 1. East Asia East Asia consists of a variety of nations: countries such as Republic of Korea and Singapore, which have attained high economic growth and have already shifted from aid recipients to donors;

More information

ACRONYMS, ABBREVIATIONS & OTHER TERMS

ACRONYMS, ABBREVIATIONS & OTHER TERMS ACRONYMS, ABBREVIATIONS & OTHER TERMS ABSDF ALP baht BPFA BSPP BSPP Burman Burmese CAPS carry-thama CEDAW cheroot CNF CPB CRPP CSW Daw eh may CONGO IB KIO KNPP KNU Ko kyat All Burma Students' Democratic

More information

The Chinese Economy. Elliott Parker, Ph.D. Professor of Economics University of Nevada, Reno

The Chinese Economy. Elliott Parker, Ph.D. Professor of Economics University of Nevada, Reno The Chinese Economy Elliott Parker, Ph.D. Professor of Economics University of Nevada, Reno The People s s Republic of China is currently the sixth (or possibly even the second) largest economy in the

More information

Greater Mekong Subregion: Northern Economic Corridor Project Lao PDR. Summary Social Action Plan

Greater Mekong Subregion: Northern Economic Corridor Project Lao PDR. Summary Social Action Plan Greater Mekong Subregion: Northern Economic Corridor Project Lao PDR A. Introduction Summary Social Action Plan 1. The Northern Economic Corridor (the Project) passes through about 90 villages, all except

More information

Lecture II North Korean Economic Development: from 1950s to today

Lecture II North Korean Economic Development: from 1950s to today Lecture II North Korean Economic Development: from 1950s to today Lecture 2: North Korea s Economic Development from 1950s to present Introduction S. Korean Nurses in Germany S. Korean Mineworkers in Germany

More information

THE IMPACT OF PROPOSED US FOREIGN ASSISTANCE CUTS: CAMBODIA S AGRICULTURAL SECTOR

THE IMPACT OF PROPOSED US FOREIGN ASSISTANCE CUTS: CAMBODIA S AGRICULTURAL SECTOR THE IMPACT OF PROPOSED US FOREIGN ASSISTANCE CUTS: CAMBODIA S AGRICULTURAL SECTOR THE IMPACT OF PROPOSED US FOREIGN ASSISTANCE CUTS: Summary findings USAID s focus on direct grants to rural agricultural

More information

Southeast Asian Economic Outlook: With Perspectives on China and India Thematic focus: Narrowing development gaps 2013 edition

Southeast Asian Economic Outlook: With Perspectives on China and India Thematic focus: Narrowing development gaps 2013 edition Southeast Asian Economic Outlook: With Perspectives on China and India Thematic focus: Narrowing development gaps 2013 edition November 2012, Bangkok, Thailand Kensuke Tanaka Head of Asia Desk OECD Development

More information

3 1-1 GDP GDP growth rate Population size Labor force Labor participation rate Employed population

3 1-1 GDP GDP growth rate Population size Labor force Labor participation rate Employed population INDEX Overview: Thailand 2 1 Economy 3 1-1 GDP 3 1-2 GDP growth rate 5 2 Population 6 2-1 Population size 6 3 Labor force and the related statistics 9 3-1 Labor force 10 3-2 Labor participation rate 12

More information

INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP INDONESIA: COUNTRY ASSISTANCE EVALUATION APPROACH PAPER

INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP INDONESIA: COUNTRY ASSISTANCE EVALUATION APPROACH PAPER April 26, 2006 Country Background INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP INDONESIA: COUNTRY ASSISTANCE EVALUATION APPROACH PAPER 1. From the mid-1960s until 1996, Indonesia was a development success story. From

More information

Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update. Indonesia

Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update. Indonesia Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update Briefing note for countries on the 2018 Statistical Update Introduction Indonesia This briefing note is organized into ten sections. The

More information

Third ASEAN Civil Society Conference (ACSC-III) 2-4 November 2007, Singapore

Third ASEAN Civil Society Conference (ACSC-III) 2-4 November 2007, Singapore Third ASEAN Civil Society Conference (ACSC-III) 2-4 November 2007, Singapore Singapore Declaration 1. We, about 200 participants from civil society organizations and trade unions across Southeast Asia

More information

UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW HUMANRIGHTS COUNCIL UNICEF INPUTS ZAMBIA December 2007

UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW HUMANRIGHTS COUNCIL UNICEF INPUTS ZAMBIA December 2007 UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW HUMANRIGHTS COUNCIL UNICEF INPUTS ZAMBIA December 2007 I. Trends 1. Zambia, with a population of approximately 11.3 million and annual growth rate of 1.6%, has one of the highest

More information

Throughout its history, Pakistan has been plagued by cycles of

Throughout its history, Pakistan has been plagued by cycles of IDA at Work Pakistan: Achieving Results in a Challenging Environment Throughout its history, Pakistan has been plagued by cycles of high growth interrupted by shocks and crises and followed by relative

More information

Concluding comments of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Fiji. Initial report

Concluding comments of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Fiji. Initial report Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women Twenty-sixth session 14 January 1 February 2002 Excerpted from: Supplement No. 38 (A/57/38) Concluding comments of the Committee on the Elimination

More information

Policy Review on Myanmar Economy

Policy Review on Myanmar Economy Policy Review on Myanmar Economy Bangkok Research Center Myanmar Migrants to Thailand and Implications to Myanmar Development By Supang Chantavanich 1 Current Situation of Migration from Myanmar in Thailand

More information

Issues, Threats and responses Vanessa Tobin UNICEF Representative Philippines

Issues, Threats and responses Vanessa Tobin UNICEF Representative Philippines Impact of the Economic Crisis on Children in Asia and the Philippines Issues, Threats and responses Vanessa Tobin UNICEF Representative Philippines Lessons learn from 1997 crisis Globalization has both

More information

SOUTHEAST ASIA E. J. PALKA

SOUTHEAST ASIA E. J. PALKA SOUTHEAST ASIA E. J. PALKA MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES A FRAGMENTED REALM OF NUMEROUS ISLAND COUNTRIES AND PENINSULAS PHYSIOGRAPHY DOMINATED BY HIGH RELIEF, CRUSTAL INSTABILITY, AND TROPICAL CLIMATES POLITICAL

More information

Hlegu. report. Final report. Aaron Weisbrod Lauren Dunn. September 2016

Hlegu. report. Final report. Aaron Weisbrod Lauren Dunn. September 2016 Final report Hlegu Township report Aaron Weisbrod Lauren Dunn September 2016 When citing this paper, please use the title and the following reference number: C-53303-MYA-1 Hlegu Township Report 1. Introduction

More information

Hidden Chains. Recommendations

Hidden Chains. Recommendations Hidden Chains Rights Abuses and Forced Labor in Thailand s Fishing Industry Recommendations To the Government of Thailand Adopt legislation prohibiting use of forced labor as a stand-alone offense, giving

More information

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND INTEGRATION ANALYSIS. A. Role of Regional Cooperation and Integration in Myanmar s Development

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND INTEGRATION ANALYSIS. A. Role of Regional Cooperation and Integration in Myanmar s Development Interim Country Partnership Strategy: Myanmar, 2012 2014 REGIONAL COOPERATION AND INTEGRATION ANALYSIS A. Role of Regional Cooperation and Integration in Myanmar s Development 1. Myanmar is strategically

More information

IS MYANMAR AN EMERGING ECONOMY? SUGGESTIONS FROM VIETNAM AND THAILAND

IS MYANMAR AN EMERGING ECONOMY? SUGGESTIONS FROM VIETNAM AND THAILAND IS MYANMAR AN EMERGING ECONOMY? SUGGESTIONS FROM VIETNAM AND THAILAND Michele Boario 16 May 2017 4th OEET Workshop on Emerging Economies: Why do some economies emerge while others do not? Outline I. Myanmar

More information

BURMA S REFUGEES: REPATRIATION FOR WHOM? By Roland Watson Dictator Watch November 12, Please share.

BURMA S REFUGEES: REPATRIATION FOR WHOM? By Roland Watson Dictator Watch November 12, Please share. BURMA S REFUGEES: REPATRIATION FOR WHOM? By Roland Watson Dictator Watch November 12, 2017 Please share. http://www.dictatorwatch.org/articles/refugeerepatriation.pdf Introduction We are well over 600,000

More information

Vietnam: The Political Economy of the Middle Income Trap

Vietnam: The Political Economy of the Middle Income Trap Sum of Percentiles World Bank Governance Indicators 2011 Vietnam: The Political Economy of the Middle Income Trap Background There is a phrase used by political economists more than economists the middle

More information

Role of Cooperatives in Poverty Reduction. Shankar Sharma National Cooperatives Workshop January 5, 2017

Role of Cooperatives in Poverty Reduction. Shankar Sharma National Cooperatives Workshop January 5, 2017 Role of Cooperatives in Poverty Reduction Shankar Sharma National Cooperatives Workshop January 5, 2017 Definition Nepal uses an absolute poverty line, based on the food expenditure needed to fulfil a

More information

JICA s Position Paper on SDGs: Goal 10

JICA s Position Paper on SDGs: Goal 10 JICA s Position Paper on SDGs: Goal 10 Goal 10: Reduce inequality within and among countries 1. Understanding of the present situation (1) Why we need to reduce inequality Since 1990, absolute poverty

More information

1400 hrs 14 June The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): The Role of Governments and Public Service Notes for Discussion

1400 hrs 14 June The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): The Role of Governments and Public Service Notes for Discussion 1400 hrs 14 June 2010 Slide I The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): The Role of Governments and Public Service Notes for Discussion I The Purpose of this Presentation is to review progress in the Achievement

More information

EXTRATERRITORIAL OBLIGATIONS IN THE CONTEXT OF CROSS-BORDER INVESTMENT IN ASEAN: THE ROLE OF HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS

EXTRATERRITORIAL OBLIGATIONS IN THE CONTEXT OF CROSS-BORDER INVESTMENT IN ASEAN: THE ROLE OF HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS EXTRATERRITORIAL OBLIGATIONS IN THE CONTEXT OF CROSS-BORDER INVESTMENT IN ASEAN: THE ROLE OF HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS This workshop examines the role of National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) in Southeast

More information