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Poverty eradication requires citizen participation
Luisa Eugenia Morales
Iniciativa Social
The absence of a state policy to steer social programmes and the lack of mechanisms to secure the participation of civil society in decision-making processes pertaining to public policies represent major obstacles to poverty eradication and the achievement of inclusive development and gender equity in Guatemala.
Guatemala will be
the most highly populated country in Central America by 2015.
Fulfilling the goal of reducing extreme poverty and hunger by half entails
enormous challenges. It is time to consolidate peace and national reconciliation
and ensure compliance with the 1996 Peace Accords that put an end to 36 years of
internal armed conflict and which offer a solid plan for advancing the country
towards development and democratization.
Another challenge is
to achieve a substantial improvement in the quality of life of 11.2 million
Guatemalans. Over half of them live in poverty and over two million survive with
less than one dollar a day,
lacking sufficient income or productive resources to make a decent living.
More than half the
population (56%) are under the age of 18,
but only 66% of children complete primary education.
This very low rate of schooling is reflected in the lack of citizen
participation in decisions relative to their present and future.
Social exclusion
Historically,
Guatemala was characterized by a model of economic and social exclusion, based
primarily on the concentration of agricultural land ownership and the
exploitation of peasant and indigenous labour.
The concentration of
land tenure remains unchanged. Of the total number of farming and agricultural
establishments, only 1.5% comprise 62.5% of arable land. In terms of the
distribution of national income, the richest 20% of the population receive 63%
of the income while the poorest 20% have access to only 2.1%.
Economic and social
inequalities seriously limit the options and opportunities of the rural
population and of women and indigenous peoples in particular. An estimated 56%
of the total population live in poverty. The poverty situation is even worse in
rural areas, where the poverty rate rises to over 80%.
During recent years,
according to United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) estimates, the gap
between the urban and rural areas has become more distressing and the growth of
extreme poverty in urban areas is remarkable: in 2000 it affected 2.8% of the
population and by 2002 the rate had risen to 4.9%. In rural areas it rose from
23.8% in 2000 to 31% in 2002.
The disadvantaged
Two thirds of
children in the country are poor and 48.7% suffer from chronic malnutrition
which produces harmful consequences and is visible in the children’s low height
for their age.
Indigenous people
represent 43% of the total population. The majority work in the agricultural
sector and receive low salaries, especially those who do not speak Spanish.
Although authorities
in the last two government administrations
have referred to the important role of women in development, they have not
encouraged the participation of women at the social level, even less so in the
case of poor and indigenous women.
One third of
indigenous girls do not attend school; in the case of indigenous boys this rate
falls to 18%.
Poor women face very
severe health risks; only 14% of the poorest quintile are assisted by a doctor
or a nurse during childbirth, 71% have their children with the help of a midwife
and the other 15% receive no attention at all, which increases the risk of death
for both mother and child.
Poverty, exclusion
and social inequity have become the characteristics which underlie the
development of society,
seriously limiting the options and opportunities of the general population and
severely affecting the rural population, women and indigenous peoples.
Commitments and
reality
The situation contrasts with the commitments which the State assumed in 1996,
when after a prolonged negotiation, the Peace Accords put an end to armed
conflict between the army and the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity (Unidad
Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca). The Peace Accords created a national
agenda – reached by consensus - to eradicate the causes that had led to such
conflict.
The State has not
complied with its Millennium Development Goal commitments to reduce poverty and
hunger by 2015. By poverty we refer to all conditions that prevent men and women
from fully enjoying their economic, social, political, cultural and
environmental rights.
Addressing the goal
of poverty eradication implies that the State should envisage short, medium and
long-term measures for the effective protection and guaranteeing of human rights
which would bring real improvements and changes to people’s lives. This includes
building citizens’ capacity to expand their options and opportunities to live a
decent life, without discrimination, poverty, injustice or insecurity.
Transparency in
state management must be seen as a permanent endeavour and goal. The uprightness
and ethics of civil servants are not enough to achieve this goal. It is also
necessary for citizens to exercise their rights to freedom of expression and to
have access to information. Only then will it be possible to promote social
participation in public management.
This participation
will enlarge the public sphere and promote interaction between the State
and civil society as well as between civil society and State. In this way they
can share the efforts and responsibilities of improving living conditions and
the quality of life through concrete social coexistence practices.
Values such as freedom, equity, inclusion, respect for ethnic diversity, women’s
empowerment and gender equity cannot be ignored when facing problems that cut
across the whole society in its quest for a better quality of life as a
pre-requisite for peace.
The World Bank has
reported that investing in the development of one woman is compensated for by
the high rates of social return to socio-economic systems. This return can be
measured in terms of a higher rate of schooling for future generations, the
curbing of infant mortality, and a reduction in fertility rates, among other
indicators.
Lacking a state
policy
As in the past, the
population today suffers from the fragility of its democratic system. Every four
years new authorities renew their promises of change. However deeply rooted
problems which constitute the basis for discrimination and exclusion in the
country continue to go unresolved. These include unemployment, public safety,
food insecurity, corruption, escalating organized crime and drug trafficking,
poor provision of basic education and health services, as well as political,
social and cultural inequities.
Not to acknowledge
the effort made by governments after the Peace Accords is to ignore the mandate
for change bestowed by society on its governments to promote development along
with equity and inclusion.
These efforts however have not materialized into state policy; they have become
instead political programmes of the party that will eventually assume power. It
is necessary to reach a national consensus over the Peace Accords, a task for
which the State is responsible in coordination with civil society. This must
guarantee and enforce compliance with the contents of the treaties and generate
initiatives and actions to improve the quality of life and living conditions in
order to move ahead in the construction of national peace.
The General Planning
Secretariat was created in 2001 with the purpose of formulating, assessing and
monitoring social development and population policy. The Secretariat was in
charge of designing the Strategy to Reduce Poverty (ERP) and other specific
strategies at the provincial and municipal levels, within the framework of the
Urban and Rural Development Councils. ERP was based on three core pillars around
which government actions should have been implemented in order to “sustainably
enhance the levels of well-being and quality of life of all Guatemalans,
especially the poorest and most excluded ones, in the short and medium terms and
comply with the Peace Accords. These pillars are: equitable economic growth and
investment in human capital and infrastructure”.
Lack of consultation
The design of the
ERP coincided with the process to define a poverty abatement strategy in other
Latin American countries participating in the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
initiative. However, contrary to what happened in other countries, the
initiative was not subjected to a participatory consultation process in
Guatemala. There was little contribution by key government stakeholders such as
the ministries of health, education and agriculture and few social funds were
dedicated to the elaboration of the strategy. Neither were the opinions, demands
and proposals of social organizations included.
The 2004-2008
Government Plan targeted four basic areas to deploy its action:
·
strengthening of family income through the promotion of investment and
productive employment,
·
fighting impunity, violence and crime,
·
human
development through education, health and access to basic services,
·
inclusion and citizen participation.
The Government is
signalling its good intentions but there is a lack of clarity and transparency
around State interventions aimed at alleviating hunger and poverty. People have
not been taken into consideration when setting priorities and defining lines of
action to meet their needs. “The short-term vision of governments has led to a
discontinuity of important medium and long-term projects for the country, such
as the Peace Accords”.
Civil society
participation
One of the biggest
obstacles impairing progress towards poverty reduction is the lack of
participation of civil society in decision-making processes relevant to public
policies.
The 2000 UNDP
Human Development Report states that equitable economic and social policies
are directly linked to the preservation of civil and political freedoms and
these, in turn, foster social and economic growth and abate poverty and
inequality at the economic and social levels. It is the duty of public
institutions and relevant stakeholders in the area of human rights to pursue
policies that favour the poor and to apply processes that ensure the rights of
the poor to participate in policy-making.
These processes will
be effective only if they are implemented and if the population perceives an
improvement in its quality of life in the form of employment, social mobility
and development opportunities.
In order to make
substantial progress towards poverty reduction, the State must promote growth
while ensuring the well-being of disadvantaged sectors, families, the rural
population and communities in greater need. In this way development and equity
will be pursued along with growth. Additionally, economic and social policies
are required at the national level, and sectoral and territorial measures should
prioritize human and natural needs and potential.
Table 1. Reality in
figures
|
|
2003 |
|
Human
Development |
|
|
Human
Development Index (HDI) |
0,672 |
|
Urban |
0,747 |
|
Rural |
0,610 |
|
Indigenous |
0,578 |
|
Non-indigenous |
0,724 |
|
Gender-related
Development Index |
0,655 |
|
Urban |
0,740 |
|
Rural |
0,575 |
|
Indigenous |
0,546 |
|
Non-indigenous |
0,711 |
|
Gender
Empowerment Index |
0,467 |
|
Education |
|
|
Literacy rate (%
of population aged 15 and over) |
69,7 |
|
Urban men |
86,8 |
|
Urban women |
77,6 |
|
Rural men |
64,4 |
|
Rural women |
49,0 |
|
Employment |
|
|
Participation
rate |
61,4 |
|
Men |
79,4 |
|
Women |
44,6 |
|
Access to public
office |
|
|
Elected
representatives |
|
|
Men |
144 |
|
Women |
14 |
Source: Our own
elaboration on the basis of data included in the Statistical Compendium on Human
Development and Rural Reality. United Nations Development Programme. Guatemala,
2004.
Notes:
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