Implementation of the Third United Nations Decade
for the Eradication of Poverty (2018–2027)
A/RES/73/246
especially in the poorest and most vulnerable countries with limited domestic
resources;
35. Stresses the importance of mobilizing greater domestic support towards
the fulfilment of ODA commitments, including by raising public awareness,
providing data on aid effectiveness and demonstrating tangible results, encourages
partner countries to build on progress achieved in ensuring that ODA is used
effectively to help to achieve development goals and targets, encourages the
publication of forward-looking plans which increase the clarity, predictability and
transparency of future development cooperation, in accordance with national budget
allocation processes, and urges countries to track and report resource allocations for
advancing gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls;
36. Expresses concern that in 2017 ODA fell by 0.6 per cent compared with
2016, while bilateral (country-to-country) aid to least developed countries rose by
4 per cent, after remaining flat for the previous six years, and that ODA was, on
average, 0.31 per cent of the aggregate donor gross national income in 2014, below
the commitment of 0.7 per cent, reiterates that the fulfilment of all ODA
commitments remains crucial and that, for many least developed countries and
landlocked developing countries, ODA remains the largest source of external
financing, and therefore emphasizes the importance of the commitments made by
many countries to achieve the national target of 0.7 per cent of gross national income
and 0.15 to 0.20 per cent of gross national income for official development assistance
to the least developed countries, and calls upon developed countries to deliver on their
commitments in relation to ODA;
37. Welcomes the increasing efforts to improve the quality of ODA and to
increase its development impact, recognizes the Development Cooperation Forum of
the Economic and Social Council, notes other initiatives, such as the high -level
forums on aid effectiveness, which produced, inter alia, the Paris Declaration on Aid
Effectiveness, the Accra Agenda for Action 25 and the Busan Partnership for Effective
Development Cooperation, which make important contributions to the efforts of the
countries that have made commitments to them, including through the adoption of
their fundamental principles, and bears in mind that there is no one -size-fits-all
formula that will guarantee effective assistance and that the specific situation of each
country needs to be fully considered;
38. Encourages all relevant stakeholders, as appropriate, to strengthen United
Nations funding for the eradication of poverty in all its forms and dimensions,
including extreme poverty, through voluntary contributions to existing poverty related system-wide funds;
39. Acknowledges the complexity of the challenge of poverty eradication, and
in this regard emphasizes that, in accelerating poverty eradication and effectively
implementing the Third Decade, the organizations of the United Nations development
system must be driven by national priorities, including thro ugh the United Nations
Development Assistance Framework, with the development of national capacities and
development strategies in developing countries continuing to be a core area of focus,
and operate in an integrated, coordinated and coherent manner, through development
programmes and projects that address poverty eradication as their underlying
objective, within their respective mandates, in order to ensure that gains are
irreversible, making full use of the interlinked and mutually reinforcing pillars of the
United Nations development system, and encourages the use of diverse strategies;
40. Reiterates the need to strengthen the leadership role of the United Nations
in promoting international cooperation for development, and recognizes the role of
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A/63/539, annex.
18-22624