IP/07/619
Brussels, 2 May 2007
High-level Conference announces new
commitments for education in developing countries
Rich country donors, international organizations
and civil society leaders underlined today the urgent need for donors to deliver
on their promises to educate all the world's children by 2015 and announced a
number of new funding commitments. Louis Michel, Gordon Brown and Paul
Wolfowitz today convened a high-level conference in Brussels in order to
accelerate progress towards the education Millennium Development Goal (MDG) that
all children complete primary education by 2015. The conference heard of
significant progress by developing countries in preparing ten-year plans to
achieve universal primary education.
New funding was announced by the European Commission committing 1.7 billion
Euros to Education from the 10th European Development Fund (2007
– 2010) and from the EC budget. In addition, the EC commits 22 Million
Euro for the Education for All Fast Track Initiative (EfA FTI). Within the
context of the 2006 promise by the United Kingdom to spend 11.2 billion Euros
(15 billion USD) to the Education for All goals, it announced 740 million Euros
in support of Ethiopia’s and Tanzania’s 10-year Education plans. The
World Bank announced its investment of 1.12 billion Euros (1.5 billion USD) in
2007, which will continue into 2008 in Education plans in the 68 poorest
countries in the world – an increase of 50% compared to the annual level
of the past five years. Germany announced an extra 8 Million Euros to EfA FTI,
with Japan adding a further 1.8 Million Euros (2.4 Million USD). New donors such
as the Soros Foundation promised an investment of 3.7 Million Euros (5 Million
USD) in support of Liberia’s Education plans conditional on other donors'
commitments.
Several donors emphasised the need for long-term, predictable funding. The
European Commission announced the introduction of a new form of budget support
aimed specifically at supporting education and other MDGs.
A significant group of private sector representatives (including Cisco
Systems, Intel, Microsoft and AMD) also announced that they would work through
the World Economic Forum’s Partnership for Education in support of country
education plans. Their investment in global education marks an important step
forward and reflects the importance of education to future economic growth and
prosperity.
All participants agreed that urgent action is needed now: 77 million children
are out of school today - including 44 million girls. At the current rate of
progress at least 75 countries, mainly in Sub-Saharan Africa, will not achieve
the Millennium Development Goal of universal primary education by 2015.
There has been strong progress from developing countries in developing sound
long-term education plans. Since the commitment to action made at the Financing
for Development conference in Abuja in May 2006, 15 African countries have
completed 10 year plans, 14 of these have plans endorsed by the ‘Education
for All’ Fast Track Initiative.
Today’s conference followed on from the Special Ministerial Roundtable
on Education in Singapore on 17 September 2006. Ministers and delegates in
Brussels looked forward to future opportunities to take stock of further
progress, including the Financing for Development conference in Accra and the
FTI Technical Group meeting in Bonn later this month, and – later in the
year – the G8 Summit, the UNESCO High Level Meeting and the EU-Africa
Summit.
In addition to the three co-convenors, conference participants included
high-level government participation from Bahrain, Denmark, Germany, Norway,
Netherlands, Portugal, UK, Ghana, Mozambique, Madagascar, Niger. Other
participants included George Soros, civil society organizations and the private
sector, including representatives from Save the Children, the Global Campaign
for Education and the World Economic Forum.