These are the paragraphs which I hope you will find helpful. They are
designed to accomplish three purposes:
1. Continue the President’s Notre Dame theme of combining a vision of
America’s international role with the realities of a novel international
system;2
2. Establish an agenda for U.S. and OECD
activity on North-South issues over the next year which, without hiding the
difficulties of the concept, examines and develops a set of proposals around
the theme of basic human needs; and
3. Establishes that this theme will be a major element in the continuing
North-South dialogue post CIEC3 for
constructive and legitimate reasons—not for tactical
reasons of “splitting” the Group of 77.
Attachment
Paper Prepared by the National Security Council
Staff4
As the Administration of President Carter has reviewed the major issues currently on the
North-South agenda and begun to establish its own set of priorities, it
has found one issue slighted in all the talk about a new international
economic order. The issue has various names: the “absolute poverty”
problem, the problem of “basic human needs,” the problem of “the
forgotten forty percent.” Whatever we choose to call it, it is the
problem of those one billion persons living at the razor’s edge of
existence. Again, as President Carter noted at Notre Dame, most na
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tions share our faith that, in the longer
run, expanded trade will best help developing countries to help
themselves. But the immediate problems of hunger, disease, high infant
mortality, illiteracy and stunted “life chances” cannot and should not be expected to
await a longer-run answer.
If our nations did not have the knowledge and the resources needed to
overcome these problems of meeting basic human needs within the next two
decades, perhaps we could excuse ourselves from making any special
effort to overcome the so-called “absolute poverty” problem.
But the knowledge of the development process and the knowledge of how to
construct a viable approach to the resolution of this acute poverty
problem is now within our grasp. What is missing is the joint
willingness of developed and developing countries to recognize that the
North-South dialogue is about human beings as
well as nation-states, and that “equality of opportunity” for a richer
and more meaningful life only makes sense as it applies to people.
In order to give proper focus to this aspect of the North-South dialogue,
the United States proposes to proceed as follows. First, we, ourselves,
will develop specific programs to overcome the absolute poverty problem
globally. We have already determined the essential ingredients and
objectives of such a program. It must deal with:
—Basic education, particularly in rural areas;
—Essential health services, again with emphasis on rural areas;
—increased food production and the provision of adequate nutrition;
—clean water.
At the June meeting of the OECD, we
plan to ask the member countries to jointly cooperate with us in
developing these programs as a principal part of the OECD’s general work program.5
Within a year, we would hope to be able to present to the developing
countries a major set of programs for discussion. Our objective would be
then to develop a joint effort that will effectively tackle the problem
of meeting the basic human needs of the world’s poorest billion people.
We recognize that this effort will require a substantial commitment of
political will and resources on the part of all countries who choose to
participate—North and South; developing and developed.
To carry this out and to conduct the North-South dialogue, we believe
that serious consideration should be given to developing appro
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priate institutional
arrangements for the North-South dialogue to continue. The United States
believes that CIEC, itself, should
continue to be available as a forum for such discussions. In the
interim, we would suggest that our governments establish a group of
recognized experts to monitor the implementation of the ideas being
discussed here and to keep our governments abreast of the opportunities
for further cooperation. As a part of this effort, the experts might
prepare for the North-South discussions which we hope will come about by
developing an overall program to meet basic needs.