The
African Development Bank (AfDB) has said addressing poverty and
inequality will dominate discussions at the forthcoming Africa Economic
Conference (AEC) to be hosted by the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
next month.
A statement by AfDB said the theme for the conference is: Addressing Poverty and Inequality in the Post 2015 Development Agenda.
The conference will hold between November 2 to 4, in Kinshasa, the DRC capital,
Citing documents from the African Union’s (AU) Agenda 2063 and
Africa’s Common Position on Post-2015 Development Agenda, the statement
envisioned an Africa developed by its citizens. “The vision is for an
integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens
and representing a dynamic force in the global arena.
“Key among Africa’s aspirations is to achieve prosperity that is
based on inclusive growth, and development that is people-driven and
that also unleashes the potential of women and youth,” the statement
read in part.
The statement said the central aim of Agenda 2063 was to eradicate
poverty in all its ramifications. It added that it would also build
shared prosperity through social and economic transformation.
The statement explained that the AEC would bring together policy
makers, researchers and development practitioners from Africa and from
around the world.
It said the experts would make contributions to the implementation
of Africa’s vision and the identification of concrete actions necessary
for poverty and inequality reduction.
The statement added that the conference would provide an opportunity
to assess the impact of current growth strategies on poverty, inequality
and human development in Africa.
The conference would also discuss successes, lessons learned and
identify remaining gaps, challenges and emerging issues on the topic.
“The AEC 2015 will contribute to the policy dialogue and advocacy on
inclusive growth by presenting the latest empirical evidence on poverty
and inequalities in Africa. It will provide critical thinking on how policy makers, development partners, private
sector, civil society organisations and academia should support the
planning and implementation of post 2015 Agenda,’’ it said.
Source: the Nation thenationonlineng.net
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