2000
[DOCID: f:hc102eh.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. CON. RES. 102
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Encouraging the development of strategies to reduce hunger and poverty,
and to promote free market economies and democratic institutions, in
sub-Saharan Africa.
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. CON. RES. 102
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This concurrent resolution may be cited as the ``Hunger to Harvest:
Decade of Support for Sub-Saharan Africa Resolution''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) Despite some progress in recent years, sub-Saharan
Africa enters the new millennium with many of the world's
poorest countries and is the one region of the world where
hunger is both pervasive and increasing.
(2) Thirty-three of the world's 41 poorest debtor countries
are in sub-Saharan Africa and an estimated 291,000,000 people,
nearly one-half of sub-Saharan Africa's total population,
currently live in extreme poverty on less than $1 a day.
(3) One in three people in sub-Saharan Africa is
chronically undernourished, double the number of three decades
ago. One child out of seven dies before the age of five, and
one-half of these deaths are due to malnutrition.
(4) Sub-Saharan Africa is the region in the world most
affected by infectious disease, accounting for one-half of the
deaths worldwide from HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, cholera,
and several other diseases.
(5) Sub-Saharan Africa is home to 70 percent of adults, and
80 percent of children, living with the HIV virus, and 75
percent of the people worldwide who have died of AIDS lived in
Africa.
(6) The HIV/AIDS pandemic has erased many of the
development gains of the past generation in sub-Saharan Africa
and now threatens to undermine economic and social progress for
the next generation, with life expectancy in parts of sub-
Saharan Africa having already decreased by 10-20 years as a
result of AIDS.
(7) Despite these immense challenges, the number of sub-
Saharan African countries that are moving toward open economies
and more accountable governments has increased, and these
countries are beginning to achieve local solutions to their
common problems.
(8) To make lasting improvements in the lives of their
people, sub-Saharan Africa governments need support as they act
to solve conflicts, make critical investments in human capacity
and infrastructure, combat corruption, reform their economies,
stimulate trade and equitable economic growth, and build
democracy.
(9) Despite sub-Saharan Africa's enormous development
challenges, United States companies hold approximately
$12,800,000,000 in investments in sub-Saharan Africa, greater
than United States investments in either the Middle East or
Eastern Europe, and total United States trade with sub-Saharan
Africa currently exceeds that with all of the independent
states of the former Soviet Union, including the Russian
Federation. This economic relationship could be put at risk
unless additional public and private resources are provided to
combat poverty and promote equitable economic growth in sub-
Saharan Africa.
(10) Bread for the World Institute calculates that the goal
of reducing world hunger by one-half by 2015 is achievable
through an increase of $4,000,000,000 in annual funding from
all donors for poverty-focused development. If the United
States were to shoulder one-fourth of this aid burden--
approximately $1,000,000,000 a year--the cost to each United
States citizen would be one penny per day.
(11) Failure to effectively address sub-Saharan Africa's
development needs could result in greater conflict and
increased poverty, heightening the prospect of humanitarian
intervention and potentially threatening a wide range of United
States interests in sub-Saharan Africa.
SEC. 3. SENSE OF CONGRESS.
It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the United States should declare ``A Decade of Support
for Sub-Saharan Africa'';
(2) not later than 90 days after the date of adoption of
this concurrent resolution, the President should submit a
report to Congress setting forth a five-year strategy, and a
ten-year strategy, to achieve a reversal of current levels of
hunger and poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, including a
commitment to contribute an appropriate United States share of
increased bilateral and multilateral poverty-focused resources
for sub-Saharan Africa, with an emphasis on--
(A) health, including efforts to prevent, treat,
and control HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and other
diseases that contribute to malnutrition and hunger,
and to promote maternal health and child survival;
(B) education, with an emphasis on equal access to
learning for girls and women;
(C) agriculture, including strengthening
subsistence agriculture as well as the ability to
compete in global agricultural markets, and investment
in infrastructure and rural development;
(D) private sector and free market development, to
bring sub-Saharan Africa into the global economy,
enable people to purchase food, and make health and
education investments sustainable;
(E) democratic institutions and the rule of law,
including strengthening civil society and independent
judiciaries;
(F) micro-finance development; and
(G) debt relief that provides incentives for sub-
Saharan African countries to invest in poverty-focused
development, and to expand democratic participation,
free markets, trade, and investment;
(3) the President should work with the heads of other donor
countries and sub-Saharan African countries, and with United
States and sub-Saharan African private and voluntary
organizations and other civic organizations, including faith-
based organizations, to implement the strategies described in
paragraph (2);
(4) Congress should undertake a multi-year commitment to
provide the resources to implement those strategies; and
(5) 120 days after the date of adoption of this concurrent
resolution, and every year thereafter, the Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development, in
consultation with the heads of other appropriate Federal
departments and agencies, should submit to Congress a report on
the implementation of those strategies, including the action
taken under paragraph (3), describing--
(A) the results of the implementation of those
strategies as of the date of the report, including the
progress made and any setbacks suffered;
(B) impediments to, and opportunities for, future
progress;
(C) proposed changes to those strategie
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s, if any;
and
(D) the role and extent of cooperation of the
governments of sub-Saharan countries and other donors,
both public and private, in combating poverty and
promoting equitable economic development.
Passed the House of Representatives December 5, 2001.
Attest:
Clerk.
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