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						 Perils 
						of gender and geography hamper global development, 
						report finds
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		[September 17, 2019]  
		By Kate and Kelland
 LONDON, September 17 - (Reuters) - Despite 
		steady development gains, a child's birthplace is still the biggest 
		predictor of its future health, and no matter which country you're born 
		in, life is harder if you're a girl, a major report said on Tuesday.
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			 The analysis by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a leading 
			philanthropic funder of health and development, found that some half 
			a billion people worldwide still don't get basic health and 
			education, and girls everywhere suffer disadvantage. 
 "Gaps between countries, districts, and boys and girls prove that 
			the world's investments in development aren't reaching everyone," 
			said the Foundation's Goalkeepers report, which tracks progress on 
			reducing poverty and improving health.
 
 It found that despite gains in girls' educational attainment, 
			women's life chances are limited by social norms, discriminatory 
			laws and policies, and gender-based violence.
 
			 
			In an interview on the report's findings, Gates Foundation chief 
			executive Sue Desmond-Hellmann said its clearest warnings were of 
			"the perils of gender and geography".
 She cited data in the report which showed for example that more 
			children die in Chad every day than in Finland every year, and that 
			while Finland's average education is up to college level, in Chad, 
			the average child doesn't finish primary school.
 
 "Gender remains a massive negative on equality, so making sure we 
			address gender inequality is the first thing," Desmond-Hellmann told 
			Reuters.
 
 "But the second thing is that if you're a girl born in (one of the 
			poorest parts of Africa), geography is also stacked against you. 
			It's just not okay that a child in Chad is 55 times more likely to 
			die than a child in Finland."
 
 
			
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			The Goalkeepers report is compiled annually by the Gates Foundation 
			and tracks progress on United Nations sustainable development goals 
			which aim to reduce inequality and poverty and improve health around 
			the world by 2030.
 While it found "unabated" development progress, with life, health 
			and prosperity improving on average across the world, it also 
			highlighted "persistent gaps" which mean many people are being left 
			behind.
 
 The report called for a new approach to development to help close 
			these gaps, targeting the poorest people in the countries and areas 
			that need to make up the most ground.
 
 Focusing on three policy areas, it said governments should 
			prioritize primary healthcare to deliver health systems that help 
			the poorest, boost digital coverage to help their least-empowered 
			people, and support farmers facing the impact of climate change.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Jan Harvey)
 
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