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Date: Thu, 05 Aug 1999 17:09:02 -0700
Subject: ESPFwd: Global Comparisons

The New York Times, September 27, 1998

KOFI ANNAN'S Astonishing Facts!

By BARBARA CROSSETTE

 Every year, the United Nations Human Development Report
looks for a new way  to measure the lives of people.
Putting aside faceless statistics like per  capita gross
domestic product or export-import figures, the report
burrows  into the facts about what children eat, who
goes to school, whether there  is clean water to drink,
how women share in the economy or who doesn't get
vaccinations against diseases that go on killing even
though they are  preventable. This year, the report
takes its first look at what people have  -- from simple
toilets to family cars -- and what proportion of the
world's  goods and services are consumed, comparatively,
by the rich and by the  poor. The pie is huge -- the
world's consumption bill is $24 trillion a  year -- but
some servings are very small indeed.

 THE HAVES -- The richest fifth of the world's people
consumes 86  percent of  all goods and services while
the poorest fifth consumes just 1.3 percent.  Indeed,
the richest fifth consumes 45 percent of all meat and
fish, 58  percent of all energy used and 84 percent of
all paper, has 74 percent of  all telephone lines and
owns 87 percent of  all vehicles.

 NATURAL RESOURCES -- Since 1970, the world's forests
have declined from 4.4  square miles per 1,000 people to
2.8 square miles per 1,000 people. In  addition, a
quarter of the world's fish stocks have been depleted
or  are in  danger of being depleted and another 44
percent are being fished at their  biological limit.

 THE GANGES -- The Ganges River symbolizes purification
to Hindus, who  believe drinking or bathing in its
waters will lead to salvation. But 29  cities, 70 towns
and countless villages deposit about 345 million
gallons  of raw sewage a day directly into the river.
Factories add 70 million  gallons of industrial waste
and farmers are responsible for another 6  million tons
of chemical fertilizer and 9,000 tons of pesticides.

 THE ULTRA RICH -- The three richest people in the world
have assets that  exceed the combined gross domestic
product of the 48 least developed  countries.

 AFRICA -- The average African household today consumes
20 percent less than  it did 25 years ago.

 THE SUPER RICH -- The world's 225 richest individuals,
of whom 60 are  Americans with total assets of $311
billion,  have a combined wealth of  over $1 trillion
--  equal to the annual income of the poorest 47
percent  of  the entire world's population.

 COSMETICS AND EDUCATION -- Americans spend $8 billion a
year on cosmetics  -- $2 billion more than the estimated
annual total needed to provide basic  education for
everyone in the world.

 THE HAVE NOTS -- Of the 4.4 billion people in
developing countries, nearly  three-fifths lack access
to safe sewers, a third have no access to clean  water,
a quarter do not have adequate housing and a fifth have
no  access to  modern health services of any kind.

 MEAT -- Americans each consume  an average of 260
pounds  of meat a year.  In Bangladesh, the average  is
six and a half pounds.

 THE FUTURE -- By 2050, 8 billion of the world's
projected 9.5 billion  people -- up from about 6 billion
today -- will be living in developing  countries.

 SMOKE -- Of the estimated 2.7 million annual deaths
from air pollution, 2.2  million are from indoor
pollution -- including smoke from dung and wood  burned
as fuel which is more harmful than tobacco smoke. 80
percent of the  victims are rural poor in developing
countries.

 WRISTWATCHES AND RADIOS -- Two thirds of India's 90
million lowest-income  households live below the poverty
line -- but more than 50 percent of these  impoverished
people own wristwatches, 41 percent own bicycles, 31
percent  own radios and 13 percent own fans.

 TELEPHONE LINES -- Sweden and the United States have
681 and 626 telephone  lines per 1,000 people,
respectively. Afghanistan, Cambodia, Chad and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo have only one line per
1,000 people.

 ICE CREAM AND WATER -- Europeans spend $11 billion a
year on ice cream --  $2 billion more than the estimated
annual total needed to provide clean  water and safe
sewers for the world's population.

 AIDS -- At the end of 1997 nearly 31 million people
were living with HIV,  up from 22.3 million the year
before. With 16,000 new infections a day --  90 percent
in developing countries -- it is now estimated that 40
million  people will be living with HIV in 2000.

 LANDMINES -- More than 110 million active landmines are
scattered in 68  countries, with an equal number
stockpiled around the world. Every month  more than
2,000 people are killed or maimed by mine explosions.

 PET FOOD AND HEALTH -- Americans and Europeans spend
$17 billion a year on  pet food -- $4 billion more than
the estimated annual additional total  needed to provide
basic health and nutrition for everyone in the world.

 $40 BILLION A YEAR -- It is estimated that the
additional cost of achieving  and maintaining universal
access to basic education for all, basic health  care
for all, reproductive health care for all women,
adequate food for all  and clean water and safe sewers
for all is roughly $40 billion a year  -- or  less than
4 percent of the combined wealth of the 225 richest
people in the  world.

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