A/RES/76/219 GA
Eradicating rural poverty to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
76
Session
128
Yes
50
No
1
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.2/76/L.9/Rev.1 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/76/219 |
| Category | SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/76/219 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/76/PV.54
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Albania
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Australia
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Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/76/219
General Assembly
Distr.: General
10 January 2022
21-19283 (E) 130122
*2119283*
Seventy-sixth session
Agenda item 24 (b)
Eradication of poverty and other development issues:
eradicating rural poverty to implement the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 17 December 2021
[on the report of the Second Committee (A/76/536/Add.2, para. 7)]
76/219. Eradicating rural poverty to implement the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolutions 73/244 of 20 December 2018, 74/237 of 19 December
2019 and 75/232 of 21 December 2020, entitled “Eradicating rural poverty to
implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”,
Reaffirming its resolution 70/1 of 25 September 2015, entitled “Transforming
our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”, in which it adopted a
comprehensive, far-reaching and people-centred set of universal and transformative
Sustainable Development Goals and targets, its commitment to working tirelessly for
the full implementation of the Agenda by 2030, its recognition that eradicating
poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest
global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development, its
commitment to achieving sustainable development in its three dimensions –
economic, social and environmental – in a balanced and integrated manner, and to
building upon the achievements of the Millennium Development Goals and seeking
to address their unfinished business,
Reaffirming also its resolution 69/313 of 27 July 2015, on the Addis Ababa
Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development,
which is an integral part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, supports
and complements it, helps to contextualize its means of implementation targets with
concrete policies and actions, and reaffirms the strong political commitment to
address the challenge of financing and creating an enabling environment at all levels
for sustainable development in the spirit of global partnership and solidarity,
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Reaffirming further the Paris Agreement 1 and its early entry into force,
encouraging all its parties to fully implement the Agreement, and parties to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 2 that have not yet done so to
deposit their instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, where
appropriate, as soon as possible,
Reaffirming the New Urban Agenda, adopted at the United Nations Conference
on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III), held in Quito, Ecuador,
from 17 to 20 October 2016,3
Bearing in mind that the seventy-fifth anniversary of the United Nations in 2020
and the fifth anniversary of the adoption of the 2030 Agenda presented an opportunity
to reaffirm collective commitment to multilateralism and to the United Nations, and
reaffirming the urgent need to accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda,
including the Sustainable Development Goals, in particular the eradication of poverty,
Recalling its declaration, in its resolution 47/196 of 22 December 1992, of
17 October as the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty,
Recalling also its resolution 72/233 of 20 December 2017, in which it
considered that the theme of the Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of
Poverty (2018–2027) should be “Accelerating global actions for a world without
poverty”, and all other resolutions related to the eradication of poverty,
Reaffirming that eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including
extreme poverty, is the greatest global challenge facing the world today and is an
indispensable requirement for sustainable development, particularly in Africa, in the
least developed countries, in landlocked developing countries, in small island
developing States and in some middle-income countries, noting with concern that as
of 2017 approximately 696 million people still lived in extreme poverty and that the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic is estimated to have pushed an additional
97 million people into extreme poverty in 2020, and underlining the importance of
accelerating sustainable, inclusive and equitable economic growth and sustainable
development, including full, productive employment and decent work for all, with a
view to reducing inequalities within and among countries,
Noting with great concern the severe negative impact on human health, safety
and well-being caused by the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, as well as
the severe disruption to societies and economies and the devastating impact on lives
and livelihoods, and that the poorest and most vulnerable are the hardest hit by the
pandemic, reaffirming the ambition to get back on track to achieve the Sustainable
Development Goals by designing and implementing sustainable and inclusive
recovery strategies to accelerate progress towards the full implementation of the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development and to help to reduce the risk of and build
resilience to future shocks, crises and pandemics, including by strengthening health
systems and achieving universal health coverage, and recognizing that equitable and
timely access for all to safe, quality, effective and affordable COVID-19 vaccines,
therapeutics and diagnostics are an essential part of a global response based on unity,
solidarity, renewed multilateral cooperation and the principle of leaving no one
behind,
Noting that over 46 per cent of the global rural population is poor, compared
with approximately 16 per cent of the global urban population, and that 4.5 billion
people depend on food systems for their livelihoods, recognizing that addressing rural
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1 Adopted under the UNFCCC in FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.21.
2 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1771, No. 30822.
3 Resolution 71/256, annex.
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poverty is fundamental for the achievement of Sustainable Development Goal 1 of
the 2030 Agenda, as well as most of the other Goals, with 70 per cent of the targets
requiring action in rural areas, emphasizing that the impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic on sustainable development have increased the number of people living in
poverty around the world and disrupted, inter alia, the normal functioning of open
markets, global supply chain connectivity and the flow of essential goods, hindering
the fight against poverty and adding urgency to the call to galvanize action and
delivery for the eradication of poverty, in all its forms and dimensions, particularly in
rural areas, where most of the extreme poor live, stressing that global inequities in
access to COVID-19 vaccines, with the bulk of vaccines disproportionately available
in high-income countries, in contrast with the low availability of COVID-19 vaccines
in low-income countries, further put at risk the health of the rural poor, in this regard
welcoming the Sustainable Development Goals Moment placing an emphasis on
poverty and inequality, on climate change and a healthy planet and on achieving
gender equality, taking note of the efforts of the President of the General Assembly at
its seventy-fourth session to launch the Alliance for Poverty Eradication, which is
timely and meaningful and continues to serve as a platform for the exchange of ideas,
policies and best practices on poverty eradication, and stressing the importance of
addressing poverty, including rural poverty issues, in these forums, as the rural poor
might be less prepared to deal with the effects of and recover from the COVID-19
crisis and could have less access to adequate sanitation, food and nutrition, health-
care services, education, the Internet, information and communications technology,
social protection, financial services and public infrastructure,
Commending the efforts and remarkable progress achieved by developing
countries in eradicating rural poverty, while noting with concern that key gaps still
remain, such as: a lack of adequate data; inadequate investment in agricultural and
rural development; lower and inadequate human capital formation relevant for rural
livelihoods; scarce non-farm income-generating opportunities; a lack of productive
capacity and agricultural transformation; persistent gender inequality; a lack of social
protection; insufficient basic infrastructure and services; a lack of or poor adaptive
capacity and resilience to cope with the adverse effects of climate change and
disasters; and a lack of effective rural institutions and of sufficient resources,
Recognizing the leading role of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations, together with other United Nations entities, including the
International Fund for Agricultural Development, the International Labour
Organization and the United Nations Development Programme, in the global efforts
to reduce rural poverty, while addressing other interlinked challenges such as
eliminating hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition and increasing the resilience of
livelihoods to threats and crises,
Noting with appreciation the aspirations, embedded in Agenda 2063 of the
African Union, to lift huge sections of the population out of poverty, improve incomes
and catalyse economic and social transformation, and recognizing the importance of
the international community’s helping African countries to achieve such goals,
especially in the rural areas of the African continent,
Noting that, while considerable progress has been made over the past decade
across all areas of development, the pace of progress observed in recent years is
insufficient and uneven to fully meet the Sustainable Development Goals and targets
by 2030, especially in the area of rural poverty eradication,
Recognizing that poverty is a serious impediment to the achievement of gender
equality and the empowerment of all women and girls, including those living in rural
areas, and that the feminization of poverty persists, emphasizing that the eradication
of poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is an
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indispensable requirement for sustainable development, acknowledging the mutually
reinforcing links between the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment
of all women and girls and the eradication of poverty, and stressing the importance of
support for countries in their efforts to eradicate poverty in all its forms and
dimensions,
Emphasizing that the implementation of the 2030 Agenda depends crucially on
the transformation of rural areas, where most of the poor and hungry live, and that, in
order to eradicate rural poverty, investment should be channelled towards sectors that
have a bigger impact, such as education and health, agriculture and infrastructure,
while noting an annual financing gap for reaching universal pre-primary, primary and
secondary education of good quality in low-income and lower middle-income
countries of 44 billion United States dollars over the period 2015–2030, and that at
least 80 billion dollars in annual investment will be needed to meet the demand for
food that is projected to increase by 70 per cent by 2050, and that the investments that
are needed for climate change mitigation and adaptation also remain underfunded,
Recalling the proclamation of 2019–2028 as the United Nations Decade of
Family Farming, to raise the profile of the role of family farming4 in contributing to
the implementation of the 2030 Agenda, and reaffirming the importance of the United
Nations Decade of Action on Nutrition (2016–2025) in the promotion of activities
towards the eradication of rural poverty,
Recognizing the interlinkages and integrated nature of the Sustainable
Development Goals, and reiterating that the eradication of rural poverty and hunger
is crucial for the achievement of internationally agreed development goals, including
those contained in the 2030 Agenda, and that rural development should be pursued
through an integrated approach which encompasses economic, social and
environmental dimensions, takes into account a gender perspective and consists of
mutually reinforcing policies and programmes, and which should be balanced,
targeted, situation-specific and locally owned, include local synergies and initiatives
and be responsive to the needs of rural populations,
Recalling that nearly 80 per cent of the extreme poor live in rural areas and work
in agriculture, that the extreme poverty rate in rural areas is three times higher than
in urban areas and that devoting resources to the development of rural areas and
sustainable agriculture and supporting smallholder farmers, especially women
farmers, is key to ending poverty in all its forms and dimensions, by, inter alia,
improving the welfare of farmers,
Taking into consideration the increasing number of young people who decide to
leave rural areas for more urbanized ones and the challenges that this trend poses to
the livelihood of rural families,
Expressing its concern that the extreme poor have limited access to productive
resources, basic health, education and social protection services, basic infrastructure
such as roads, water and electricity, and off-farm employment opportunities, and are
susceptible to the impacts of natural disasters, especially weather-related hazards,
including the El Niño phenomenon, and the adverse effects of climate change, and
that rural women and girls fare far worse on most development indicators,
Emphasizing the importance of enhancing global support for national work on
rural development policies and strategies, including on commodity production as well
as increased public and private investments to upgrade productive capacity, and that
tackling rural poverty requires integrated, cross-sectoral, multi-stakeholder and
context-specific interventions, with a strong emphasis on sustainable food and
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4 Resolution 72/239.
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agricultural systems for food security, nutrition, economic growth, revitalization and
development in rural areas,
1.
Takes note of the report of the Secretary-General5 and the recommendations
contained therein;
2.
Reaffirms that eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions,
including extreme poverty, for all people everywhere, is the greatest global challenge
and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development, as well as an
overarching objective of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, 6 of which
the Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing
for Development7 is an integral part, supporting and complementing it;
3.
Expresses its deep concern that the progress in reducing poverty remains
uneven, with 1.3 billion people still living in multidimensional poverty, and that this
number continues to be significant and unacceptably high, whereas the levels of
inequality in income, wealth and opportunities remain high or are increasing in a
number of countries, and the non-income dimensions of poverty and deprivation, such
as access to quality education or basic health services, and relative poverty remain
major concerns, and stresses the importance of national and global efforts to create
conditions for sustainable development, inclusive and sustained economic growth,
shared prosperity and decent work for all in society, taking into account different
levels of national development capacities;
4.
Recognizes the importance of promoting socioeconomic development in
rural areas as an effective strategy and important means at the global level for the
eradication of poverty, including extreme poverty, and therefore underlines the
importance of shaping a rural poverty eradication pattern with the concerted efforts
of the whole of society to promote socioeconomic development in rural areas;
5.
Emphasizes that economic growth continues to leave rural dwellers
behind, that, circa 2018, 80 per cent of the people living in extreme poverty lived in
rural areas and 40.2 per cent of the population in sub-Saharan Africa lived on less
than 1.90 dollars per day in 2018, and recommends that countries promote dedicated
and coordinated social, economic, agricultural and rural development in their national
policies, including by adopting rural-focused poverty eradication strategies in
alignment with the 2030 Agenda, social policies aimed at improving human capital in
rural areas and ensuring access to adequate social protection coverage, agricultural
policies aimed at boosting agricultural productivity, and rural development policies
aimed at improving access to rural infrastructure and basic services of high quality
and at boosting non-farm employment opportunities;
6.
Recognizes the critical role and contribution of rural women, including
smallholders and women farmers, and indigenous women and women in local
communities, and their traditional knowledge in enhancing agricultural and rural
development, improving food security and eradicating rural poverty;
7.
Stresses the importance of taking targeted measures to eradicate poverty
in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, by formulating rural
development strategies with clear poverty eradication goals, strengthening national
statistical capacity and monitoring systems and implementing nationally appropriate
social protection systems and measures for all;
8.
Encourages all countries and other relevant stakeholders to promote
inclusive economic transformation in rural areas that increases productivity while
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5 A/76/239.
6 Resolution 70/1.
7 Resolution 69/313, annex.
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ensuring productive employment and decent work, access to quality public services,
reliable and appropriate social protection systems, quality and resilient infrastructure,
roads and telecommunications, as well as preparedness planning for crises and early
warning, reiterates that the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the important role
of digital connectivity and access and the potential of e-commerce and e-learning
solutions for poverty eradication, and thus calls upon all stakeholders to strengthen
digital, information and communications technology, science, technology and
innovation cooperation, especially in the area of e-commerce, financial technology
(fintech), affordable and reliable Internet connectivity and digital infrastructure
construction to keep food and agriculture supply chains functioning and achieve
momentum under the 2030 Agenda for an inclusive, sustainable and resilient recovery
for global development, in particular in rural areas, putting people at the centre of the
response, protecting our planet and achieving prosperity, with no one left behind, in
line with the 2030 Agenda;
9.
Recognizes that eradicating poverty in rural areas cannot be separated from
the transformation and strengthening of food systems and that ensuring fair markets
that enable the participation of smallholder and family farmers in food systems,
particularly in value chains where small-scale producers have a comparative
advantage, will continue to be important, in this regard takes note with appreciation
of the United Nations Food Systems Summit, held in 2021, which recognized the
transformative effects of food systems as a driver for the achievement of the
Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, underscores that promoting a universal,
rules-based, open, transparent, predictable, inclusive, non-discriminatory and
equitable multilateral trading system under the World Trade Organization is essential
for building sustainable, inclusive and resilient food systems, and calls upon all
countries to promote agricultural and rural development in their national policies,
renew their efforts to promote the use of innovative approaches towards achieving
sustainable agriculture and food systems, including sustainable productivity growth,
significantly reducing food loss and waste, and strengthen policies that support small-
scale producers in engaging in agriculture and food system value chains;
10. Also recognizes the importance of employment for pro-poor growth in
rural areas, and encourages the United Nations system and development partners to
assist countries, upon their request, in mainstreaming employment into investment
policy and poverty reduction strategies, including those focused on rural area
development, and fostering rapid agricultural productivity growth, especially in
developing countries, by increasing investment in agricultural and related rural off-
farm activities;
11. Further recognizes the need to design, implement and pursue gender-
responsive economic and social policies aimed at, inter alia, eradicating poverty,
including in rural areas, and combating the feminization of poverty, ensuring the full
and equal participation of rural women in the development, implementation and
follow-up of development policies and programmes and poverty eradication
strategies, supporting increased rural employment and decent work, and promoting
the participation of women at all levels and sectors of the rural economy and in
diverse on-farm and off-farm economic activities, including sustainable agricultural
and fisheries production;
12. Encourages Member States, international organizations, the private sector
and other partners to develop programmes to foster the creation of decent work in
rural areas and increase the investment in agricultural and related off-farm activities,
especially for young people;
13. Emphasizes that, globally, 2 billion people, primarily in rural areas in
developing countries, do not have access to formal financial services, and encourages
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further efforts of the international community to offer affordable ways to access
finance for the financially excluded in rural areas;
14. Also emphasizes the need to increase investment, including through
enhanced international cooperation, in rural infrastructure, especially in roads, water,
sanitation and electricity;
15. Expresses its commitment to raising public awareness to promote the
eradication of poverty and extreme poverty in all countries, to mobilizing the
enthusiasm and creativity of all stakeholders, especially the rural residents living in
extreme poverty, to fight against poverty, to promoting their active participation in
the design and implementation of programmes and policies that affect them, and to
providing quality education for the rural poor, with the aim of achieving the 2030
Agenda;
16. Reiterates the need for enhanced and expanded access by developing
countries to appropriate technologies that are pro-poor and raise productivity, and
underlines the need for measures to increase investment in agriculture, including
modern technologies, as well as in natural resources management and capacity-
building of developing countries;
17. Stresses that the achievement of sustainable development and the
eradication of poverty also hinge on the ability and readiness of countries to
effectively mobilize domestic resources, attract foreign direct investment, fulfil
official development assistance commitments and use official development assistance
effectively, and facilitate the transfer of technology to developing countries, on
mutually agreed terms, and further stresses that the resolution of unsustainable debt
situations is critical for heavily indebted poor countries, while remittances have
become a significant source of income and finance for receiving economies and their
contribution to the achievement of sustainable development;
18. Recognizes the importance of addressing the diverse needs of and
challenges faced by countries in special situations, in particular African countries, the
least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and small island
developing States, as well as the specific challenges facing many middle-income
countries, and therefore requests the United Nations development system, the
international financial institutions, regional organizations and other stakeholders to
ensure that these diverse and specific development needs are appropriately considered
and addressed, in a tailored fashion, in their relevant strategies and policies, with a
view to promoting a coherent and comprehensive approach towards individual
countries;
19. Realizes that bridging the digital divide will require strong commitment
by all relevant stakeholders at the national and international levels, reiterates the
importance of investing in infrastructure for greater access to affordable technological
devices and services for rural populations, which includes leveraging technology-
enabled financial services and financial technologies to promote financial inclusion,
and encourages efforts by all relevant stakeholders, especially United Nations
agencies, funds and programmes, in the spirit of win-win cooperation, to assist
developing countries in overcoming the digital divide and promoting the use of
information and communications technologies to foster economic and social
development, particularly in rural areas, with the aim of building a shared future for
humankind;
20. Recognizes the devastating impact of diseases on societies, and calls for
measures by relevant United Nations bodies, in accordance with their respective
mandates, and other stakeholders to make good use of their experience and
advantages to further help developing countries with the aim of improving rural
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development planning, including poverty eradication and multisectoral development
activities covering economic and social aspects, including the gender perspective;
21. Reiterates the urgent need to accelerate the pace of rural poverty
eradication, and requests the Secretary-General, in close collaboration with the
secretariat of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, as well as
other relevant international organizations, to submit to the General Assembly at its
seventy-seventh session a report on the status of the implementation of and follow-up
to the present resolution in order to identify the progress achieved, gaps and
challenges faced in rural poverty eradication, especially in developing countries, as
well as the means of implementation to combat the COVID-19 pandemic and address
its impacts, and to list rural poverty eradication as a priority for an annual Sustainable
Development Goals moment to highlight inspiring action on the Goals, in the context
of the general debate of the General Assembly;
22. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its seventy-seventh
session, under the item entitled “Eradication of poverty and other development
issues”, the sub-item entitled “Eradicating rural poverty to implement the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development”.
54th plenary meeting
17 December 2021
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