CHILD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY: THE WAY FORWARD

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than in the eastern provinces: there were 12.5% underweight
children in the former compared to 5.8% in the latter.

Figure 2. Prevalence of child malnutrition by residence, Nigeria

Source: Omilola (2010).


Social exclusion, MDG progress and effective policies


Social exclusion matters because it undermines progress on the


MDGs and betrays the promise of social justice contained in the


Millennium Declaration. It slows down the rate at which a given


level of economic growth translates into poverty reduction.


Indeed, by disadvantaging certain groups from childhood, it


contributes to the inter-generational cycle of poverty. It has tragic


personal consequences: it undermines people’s sense of self worth


and agency. It is associated with despair, depression, substance


abuse and criminal activity. And it can have profound consequences


for the fabric of society: the grievances associated with social


exclusion lie behind many examples of civil conflict in the world


today.


In answer to the question posed by our report, the MDGs can


provide a pathway to social justice but only if attention is paid to the


social, cultural and political dimension of policies as much as to


their technical and economic dimensions. We have to go beyond


business as usual approaches, we have to make the additional effort.


Here we can learn from the countries that have made progress on

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