Type | Report |
Title | An Update of Reproductive Health, Gender, Population and Development Situation in Sudan, 2011 |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | http://countryoffice.unfpa.org/filemanager/files/sudan/final.pdf |
Abstract | udan is in a critical political, socio-economic and demographic transition, particularly in the post-cessation era, together with emerging national opportunities and challenges vis-à-vis the changing governance in the Arab region and the internationally down-turning economies. The newly two established post-cessation countries (Sudan and Southern Sudan) have serious disputes and a long trail to reach a peaceful coexistence. Although the Government has recently signed Peace Agreement in Doha with some of the Darfuri rebel movements, brutal fighting is perpetual in South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and some pockets in Darfur. Sudan’s external debt was estimated to have reached about US$ 38 billion in 2010 recording a rise of 85% of its level in 2000. The oil discovery in 1999 has transformed the economy from food-producing into a mono-product food-importing and service economy with high vulnerability to international crises. Oil used to contribute over 95% of merchandise exports and about 50% of government revenues. Due to the country’s cessation, the Sudan has lost 80% of its oil fields, thus leaving a highly exposed economy that is hardly able to service its debts, attract FDI, and achieve tangible progress in the MDGs. Shortage in supply of hard currency has left huge budget deficit and has nearly doubled the US$ exchange rate against the SDG (from almost a stable rate of SDG 2.0 to above 4.0 in the parallel market). The result has been a sharp increase in prices of almost all the basic consumer goods/services, thus further worsening the already beleaguered living conditions of the bulk of the population who are classified as poor. In recent estimates (2009), Sudan has scored medium human development rate (52%) with 17% of the population live on less than US$ 1.25 per day. Poverty has been formally estimated to have engulfed about 47% on national average with enormous variations between and within states, particularly areas with conflict, pastoralists, displaced, poor/primary production, and dependency on natural resources. While the lowest ratio of population under the poverty line has been recorded in Khartoum (26%), the highest has been recorded in Darfur Region (average 62.7% - North Darfur recorded 69.4%), followed by Kordofan Region (58.7%). The national poverty map suggests that there are gaps and socio-economic disparities between states and within the same state at the different locality levels. This situation is increasing the population dynamics, particularly migration from rural to urban areas, thus further weakening the productive capacity of the rural economies, deepening poverty in both rural and urban areas, and widening the regional imbalances with serious implications to national peace and human security. However, the geographical move has made little change in the life style of most migrants and IDPs, particularly those who reside in unplanned areas in the fringes of big urban centres. udan national population census (2008) recorded a net internal migration of about 1.8 million persons, about 95% of whom were received by Khartoum and the rest (about 100,000) by the eastern States of Red Sea and Gedarif. While migration was predominantly rural-urban, it has recently become urban-urban in direction, not planned/prepared for, prompted by push rather than pull factors, and no longer young-male-selective but involves families and sometimes whole communities (e.g. IDPs) and businesses (e.g. from periphery towns to the national capital); sometimes, migration was even a forced one. These are some of the issues that should factor the population policies and planning (national and state). |
» | Sudan - Population and Housing Census 2008 |