He told the UN observance of the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty that at least 700 million people were lifted out of extreme poverty between 1990 and 2010 and he is determined to help UN make "poverty history."
Since the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008, Ban said inequality has grown more pronounced and discrimination against women and girls remains "a blatant injustice." He warned that "entrenched poverty and prejudice and vast gulfs between wealth and destitution, can undermine the fabric of societies and lead to instability."
The observance coincided with the release of a UN report by international experts on financing sustainable development which cited research from the Brookings Institution showing that about USD 66 billion is needed annually to increase incomes of the poorest to USD 1.25 a day.
Finnish Ambassador Pertti Majanen, co-chair of the experts committee, said that government aid to developing countries is about double that amount.
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The challenge, they said, is for countries to promote financial systems that give incentives to reallocating a percentage of savings to development programs, including combatting climate change.
Majanen told a news conference that institutional investors' assets today are USD 80-90 trillion, and only a very small percentage is used for development efforts. He said a better dialogue with the private sector could open "huge possibilities" for greener investments to promote development.
"This money I'm discussing, a very big portion of it will be needed for some other purposes there is no choice," Majanen said. "We have to look into the priorities every day and try to select the right priorities, but Ebola will really change the picture.