Africa Business Communities

Common Position on Africa’s Post-2015 Development Agenda Set to Take Shape in Senegal

Representatives from governments, parliaments, CSOs, private sector; youth, and NGOs from the Central, West and North Africa are gathering on December 10-11, 2012 in Dakar, Senegal, to discuss top priorities to be included in the global development agenda beyond 2015, which will be debated at the UN General Assembly in September 2013.

While efforts continue across Africa to achieve the time-bound Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), this two-day forum is part of unprecedented consultations to build a collective vision, to be endorsed by African Ministers and ratified by Heads of State at the African Union’s May 2013 Summit.

“In order for Africa to reap the rewards of its booming population and economic growth, its post-MDG agenda must prioritize building skills for tomorrow’s job market, fostering efficiency and accountability in services and building social and financial systems for inclusive growth,” said Nejmudin Bilal, Principal Economist at the African Development Bank.

The forum is sponsored by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Africa Union Commission (AUC), the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the African Development Bank (AfDB).

Participants will discuss inclusive growth, education and the ways of transforming the structure of African economies so as to translate growth into job creation, mobilization of domestic resources and rural development, as well as issues that emerged from the Rio+20 Summit, such as bringing together the social, environmental and economic dimensions included in sustainable development.

“These institutions are facilitating a bottom-up, inclusive and open process with the participation of a broad spectrum of stakeholders to contribute to defining Africa’s development priorities beyond 2015,” said Babacar Cissé, Deputy Director of UNDP’s Regional Bureau for Africa.

Africa has made steady progress on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the internationally agreed targets which aim to reduce poverty by 2015. Advances have been made in primary school enrollment, gender parity in primary school enrollment, the proportion of seats held by women in national parliament, and HIV and AIDS prevalence rates.

In spite of this progress, Africa still faces the challenges of addressing pervasive income inequalities, creating decent jobs, access to health and sanitation services.

“The articulation of an African common position must not be limited to the development of the broad framework of the agenda. It must also extend to the process of developing goals, targets and indicators. This is important because it is precisely these goals, targets and indicators that will constitute the operation and dimension of the new development agenda,” said Bart Armah, ECA’s Chief of MDGs and LDCs, who stood in for Professor Adebayo Olukoshi.

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