United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), eight global policy goals designed to end extreme poverty worldwide by 2015. The eight goals—the product of a working committee made up of the World Bank, the World Health Organisation, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, and several United Nations (UN) organizations—were adopted by acclamation by world leaders from 189 countries at the 2000 UN Millennium Summit, which was held in New York City on September 6–8, 2000.
The eight Millennium Development Goals are as follows:
Although the United Nations Millennium Campaign has claimed some success—such as 89 percent of the world’s population having access to potable water by 2013, and numerous local and regional advances in education, neonatal care, and vaccination rates—progress toward these eight goals has been uneven. Some critics have charged that some goals, such as halving the number people experiencing extreme hunger or reducing biodiversity loss, are unattainable and unrealistic as long as the government policies that underpin those phenomena are not addressed.