Financing for Development and Universal Essential Services
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Financing for Development and Universal Essential Services

Financing for Development and Universal Essential Services

Oxfam believes that equal access to opportunity should be available to all. We urge governments around the world to invest in basic services like education, healthcare and sanitation to tackle inequality and provide the poor with opportunities for sustainable development.

 

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Impact Stories

A woman from Bangladesh doing her laundry by an open sewer.

bangladesh - Fair Taxes: The Cure for the Lack of HealthCare

Caption: Rasheda Begum washing clothes in her yard, beside an open sewer. Chittagong, Bangladesh (Photos: GMB Akash/Oxfam)

‘Waste, garbage and polluted water runs down the side of our house. It’s an eyesore,’ Rasheda (pictured), 24, said. The young mother of two lives with her husband and mother-in-law in a shack in an industrial area of Chittagong in south-eastern Bangladesh. ‘We even see faeces floating on the water,’ she continued. ‘Because of this, the whole family is often sick, especially with diarrhoea. The children suffer from diarrhoea the most.

‘I spend sleepless nights worrying about the children getting sick. The treatment is so expensive. My husband earns about 10,000 taka (roughly HK$922) a month as a driver; 10,000 taka is not enough for a family of five to live on. Should I buy medicine for my children, or should I buy food to feed my family?’ Unfortunately, many families like Rasheda’s struggle with the same question.

Rasheda’s shack is surrounded by factories, some of which belong to multinational companies. However, they often take advantage of cheap labour in Bangladesh and make outrageously large sums without paying their fair share of tax in Bangladesh by transferring their profits to countries with low tax rates. However, to countless families in developing countries like Rasheda’s, corporate taxes are essential as they help fund public services.

Oxfam’s research has found that Bangladesh is collecting much less tax than it could be and a portion should be coming from companies. Oxfam is thus working with SUPRO, a Bangladeshi network of civil society organisations to call for a fairer tax system and a crackdown on corporate tax dodging so that the government has the revenue to invest in essential services like healthcare.

Together, Oxfam has been creating opportunities for national dialogue wherein we urge the government to adopt a progressive tax system. We also support community-based organisations’ active participation in the budgetary process to hold local governments accountable. On the ground, we’re also piloting projects like the use of water vending machines that are run by community-based organisations in poor residential areas to ensure access to clean water at an affordable price.

By tackling the problems people like Rasheda face by getting to the root cause to bring about long-term structural change and easing the symptoms to meet immediate needs, we hope families like Rasheda’s are able to thrive and not just survive.

A rundown squat toilet.
 
The communal toilet in the shared yard of Rasheda’s home, used by up to 15 adults. She believes it’s too unhygienic for her children to use. (Photo: GMB Akash)
A channel of filthy waste runs through the narrow yard where they bathe, prepare meals and wash and dry their clothes. In rainy season this overflows, flooding their homes. (Photo: GMB Akash)
 
A channel of filthy waste runs through the narrow yard where they bathe, prepare meals and wash and dry their clothes. In rainy season this overflows, flooding their homes. (Photo: GMB Akash)
'I spend sleepless nights worrying about the children getting sick. The treatment is so expensive. Should I buy medicine for my children, or should I buy food to feed my family?' Many families like Rasheda’s struggle with the same question.
 
'I spend sleepless nights worrying about the children getting sick. The treatment is so expensive. Should I buy medicine for my children, or should I buy food to feed my family?' Many families like Rasheda’s struggle with the same question.

 

 

A young girl from Odisha, India, in her school uniform sitting next to her mother, who's wearing a sari.

India - Bringing dropout rates to zero

Caption: Shanti (left), 11, speaks Ho, her tribe’s language, but this isn’t enough to help her achieve her dreams of becoming a doctor because to get into a university, she needs to learn Odia – the official language of Odisha (one of India’s 24 official languages). That’s why Oxfam has supported its local partner, Sikshasandhan, to train 3,500 Multilingual Education teachers in Odisha – who are educated youth from tribal communities – to teach tribal children in their mother tongue, Odia and English. (Photo: Oxfam India)

Oxfam International’s report ‘The Power of Education to Fight Inequality’ points out that across the developing world, a child from a poor family is seven times less likely to finish secondary school than a child from a rich family. In India, for instance, children between 6 and 14 are legally entitled to eight years of free education. However, the enrolment rate of over 87 per cent of government primary schools has not met government standards. One of the reasons for this is that the government has not invested enough in education and has failed to enable states and cities across the country to provide an ideal learning environment for school children.

This lack of funding in education is taking a heavy toll on India’s tribal communities too. In Odisha, India, almost a quarter of the population are tribals and make up a large proportion of the poor there. Most only speak their own tribe’s language and are unable to understand Odia, Odisha’s official language, which has proved to be a major hindrance for many tribal children, especially in terms of their education.

That’s why Oxfam has supported its local partner, Sikshasandhan, to train 3,500 Multilingual Education (MLE) teachers in Odisha – who are educated youth from tribal communities – to teach tribal children in their mother tongue, Odia and English. By doing this, they help students better understand the material that’s taught at school, pique their interest and equip them for further education. We’re also advocating for the government to provide mother tongue-based teaching for tribal children.

For seven years, Gitanjali Behera (pictured in pink below) has been teaching in Odia. The language barrier, though, used to be a problem. Thankfully, after Madhasing Baipai (pictured in a dress shirt below), the MLE teacher, joined the school six years ago, the situation has improved by leaps and bounds. Through the training he’s received, he’s helping his students learn Odia and the dropout rate has dropped to zero. ‘Kids come to school now and are more interested in school because of the language support,’ he told us contentedly.

A woman in a pink scarf smiling.
 
For seven years, Gitanjali Behera  has been teaching in Odia. The language barrier, though, used to be a problem. (Photo: Samantha Wong / Oxfam)
A man in a red shirt smiling. Several children surround him.
 
After Madhasing Baipai, the Multilingual Education teacher, joined the school six years ago, the situation has improved by leaps and bounds. Through the training he’s received, he’s helping his students learn Odia and the dropout rate has dropped to zero. (Photo: Samantha Wong / Oxfam)
Children sitting in a circle on the floor in a classroom. One child is holding a stick and trying to pick up a letter in the Odia 'alphabet' as part of a game.
 
Teachers use games and interactive activities to pique the interest of students. (Photo: Sagarika Ray / Sikshasandhan)

 

 

A young man standing beside a bed in a hospital.

Vietnam - Too Poor to be Healthy

Caption: ‘I just want to have my diseases cured and pay all the loans back,’ said 16-year-old Nhut, who now lives at the Ho Chi Minh City Oncology Hospital. (Photo: Adam Patterson / Oxfam)

When Nhut was 15, he was diagnosed with a brain tumour. Emergency surgery to remove it saved his life, but left his family with unmanageable debt. Despite having health insurance, his family still had to take out a high interest loan to cover the medical fees. Since the surgery, Nhut has had to have further cancer treatment, leaving his parents with no choice but to sell their family home, farmland and farm assets.

Nhut’s case isn’t unique though. Each year, thousands of Vietnamese families are forced to take out loans and sell assets to pay for healthcare. In 2012, for instance, over 400,000 Vietnamese households were pushed into, or further into, poverty due to health expenditures. Despite increased public spending on health, it tends to be pro-rich. Public expenditure on hospitals and subsidies for wealthier citizens is much larger, whereas spending on commune health centres account for a small share of total spending.

We at Oxfam are thus calling on the Vietnamese government to increase budget allocations for public services in the poorest areas and for the most marginalised groups. We’re also calling on the government to provide resources and support for civil society to track and monitor budgets, and to increase spending on social protection, public health and education systems.

 

Together, we can transform more lives!

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