Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
The final report on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) concludes that the project has been ‘the most successful anti-poverty movement in history’. Two key claims underpin this narrative: that global poverty has been cut in half, and global hunger nearly in half, since 1990. This good-news narrative has been touted by the United Nations and has been widely repeated by the media. But closer inspection reveals that the UN’s claims about poverty and hunger are misleading, and even intentionally inaccurate. The MDGs have used targeted statistical manipulation to make it seem as though the poverty and hunger trends have been improving when in fact they have worsened. In addition, the MDGs use definitions of poverty and hunger that dramatically underestimate the scale likely of these problems. In reality, around four billion people remain in poverty today, and around two billion remain hungry – more than ever before in history, and between two and four times what the UN would have us believe. The implications of this reality are profound. Worsening poverty and hunger trends indicate that our present model of development is not working and needs to be fundamentally rethought.
2011 •
2010 •
Asia and the Pacific, despite visible signs of prosperity due to years of rapid economic growth, has made insufficient progress in freeing its population from hunger and malnutrition, the most basic marker of true development. Given the importance of reducing poverty and hunger as core development priorities, the international community has placed these as the first Millennium Development Goal (MDG), adopted in the historic Millennium Declaration of September 2000.

Loading Preview
Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.
Also reprinted in: Health and Human Rights in a Changing World (London: Routledge, 2013), pp. 179-190.
A Poverty of Rights: Six Ways to Fix the MDGs2010 •
Center for Global …
An evaluation of progress toward the Millennium Development Goal One Hunger Target: A country-level, food and nutrition security perspective2010 •
Journal of Human Development
The First United Nations Millennium Development Goal: A cause for celebration?2004 •
2004 •
Food Research International
Addressing the challenges of climate change and biofuel production for food and nutrition security2010 •
2015 •
2011 •