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Reducing Poverty
Poverty reduction, the new overarching goal of ADBA new social policy agenda is emerging in Asia and the Pacific. Economic growth and investment in human development are in themselves not sufficient to eradicate poverty in the region. In response to this agenda, ADB's President announced that reducing poverty would become ADB's main goal; and in November 1999, ADB's new poverty reduction strategy was adopted. The new strategy rests on three pillars:
Promoting pro-poor, sustainable economic growthGrowth is neither automatically pro-poor, nor by itself broad-based and inclusive. It must be made so. This requires that
Supporting social developmentEconomic growth most effectively reduces poverty when accompanied by comprehensive programs for social development. Just as some targeting of economic development is necessary to reach bypassed areas, so also must social development be targeted. ADB's strategy recognizes this. Social protection assists individuals, households, groups, and communities to better manage risks and achieve economic stability. Such programs include old-age pensions, insurance, formal and informal social safety nets, and policies to improve labor standards and labor mobility. In many societies, women suffer disproportionately from the burden of poverty and are systematically excluded from access to essential assets. Also, women often contribute more to improving the living standard and the income of poor households through their work, spending patterns, care giving, and other activities. Improving the status of women, particularly poor women, addresses a priority area of poverty reduction and provides important socioeconomic returns through reduced health and welfare costs, and lower fertility and maternal and infant mortality rates. Facilitating good governanceThe quality of governance is critical to poverty reduction. Good governance facilitates participatory, pro-poor policies as well as sound macroeconomic management. It ensures the transparent use of public funds, encourages growth of the private sector, promotes effective delivery of public services, and helps establish the rule of law. Since effective and efficient delivery of basic services by the public sector matters most to the poor, weak governance hurts them disproportionately. In recognition of the importance of good governance for sustained economic development in Asia and the Pacific, ADB adopted, in October 1995, a policy on governance that identified four means to sustained economic development: accountability, participation, predictability, and transparency. Since 1995, ADB has engaged in a variety of country-based and subregional technical assistance activities to disseminate international experience in governance and public management, and through loans, has supported several governance reform programs adopted by the governments of its developing member countries (DMCs). As a major extension of its governance policy, ADB formally adopted an anticorruption policy in 1998. The policy is centered on three objectives:
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