Untitled Document
AUGUST 15, 2007 EARTHQUAKE IN PERU
The U.S. Agency for International Development is highly committed to helping Peruvians during this difficult time. Below we provide links to some useful websites, where you may find information about the August 15 earthquake.
Summary of USAID/US Government Earthquake Assistance
USAID's Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA)
Peru's National Civil Defense Institute (INDECI)
Peruvian Agency for International Cooperation (APCI)
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General Program Overview
Among the most dynamic in Latin America, Peru's economy continued to steam ahead in 2006 with an estimated GDP growth rate of 8.0%. Notwithstanding this impressive macroeconomic performance, major challenges remain with 49.5% of Peruvians still living in poverty and 18% in extreme poverty. To assist in poverty reduction, USAID's activities emphasize trade-led economic growth and increased market access for micro, small and medium enterprises. Limited government presence in the highlands and jungle allows illegal coca cultivation, drug trafficking, illegal logging, remnants of terrorism, and HIV/AIDS transmission to flourish. USAID's programs offer alternatives to illicit coca and strengthen government effectiveness to provide services in health, education, and environmental management in areas most affected by illegal drug cultivation. In the governance sector, perceptions that government is not responsive to citizens' demands and government's own capacity limitations to deliver services effectively and transparently result in a continuing low level of confidence in democratic institutions and can lead to conflict when groups choose to express their views outside of normal channels for political participation. USAID works to improve the accountability and effectiveness of selected regional and local governments and to encourage constructive dialogue with citizen groups.
Programs
DEMOCRACY: USAID's decentralization program focuses nationally on policy
reform and locally in the Mission's priority coca-growing regions to help create
stronger local governments better able to act as a deterrent to drug trafficking,
illegal logging, terrorism, and other criminal practices, as well as to respond
effectively to citizen needs. USAID also promotes political party strengthening
and anti-corruption activities, including transparency, accountability, and
greater citizen participation across all program areas.
ECONOMIC GROWTH: In an effort to alleviate the severe poverty conditions
in Peru, current USAID activities are laying the foundation for sustained trade-led
economic growth and increased market access for micro, small and medium enterprises.
Activities are focused on poverty reduction by expanding opportunities for low-income
Peruvians to participate in the international economy. USAID works with the
national, regional and local governments in areas such as customs reform, business
registration reform, regional export plans, and infrastructure concessions.
Work with the private sector includes an extensive business development services
program and support for an open dialogue on free trade, including the recently
negotiated Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) between the US and Peru. After
52 years of humanitarian assistance for food security, the Mission's P.L. 480
Title II Program will phase out in 2007.
ENVIRONMENT: USAID's efforts are designed to improve the Government
of Peru's environmental policy and build the capacity of environmental institutions
to promote sustainable forest management, protect biodiversity, and comply with
the Environmental Chapter and Cooperation Agreement of the PTPA.
PERU/ECUADOR BORDER PROGRAM: This program focuses on the economic integration
of the once contentious border region through increased global trade and investment.
USAID is helping to improve key government services, strengthen economic infrastructure,
and increase the productivity of private enterprises. Activities help expand
market access opportunities for border populations for bilateral Ecuador-Peru
trade as well as trade with other countries, including the US.
HEALTH: USAID's multi-pronged health program is improving the health
of Peruvians and strengthening the performance of key institutions and organizations
in the sector. USAID is working with the Ministry of Health to support the decentralization
of health services to regional and local levels, improve public sector medicine
distribution systems and strengthen the Ministry's capacity for surveillance
and response to infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.
Community-level assistance works directly with poor and indigenous people to
improve their health status by encouraging healthier behaviors and practices.
EDUCATION: USAID programs are working at the local level to enhance
the quality of and access to rural primary schools in two of the seven coca-growing
regions in which the Mission's programs are focused. Policy-related activities
provide technical assistance to the national and regional governments to facilitate
the decentralization process as well as to boost civil society participation
in oversight of education.
ALTERNATIVE DEVELOPMENT: A key component of the USG's comprehensive
counternarcotics strategy, USAID's Alternative Development Program supports
communities to adopt lifestyles free of illicit coca cultivation. This support
comes in the form of projects chosen by the communities themselves, such as
small-scale infrastructure, assistance with new crops or business opportunities,
and improved social services. USAID also promotes national policy reform and
works to inform the national debate on coca policy. Additionally, the program
uses various communications media to raise awareness of the benefits of licit
lifestyles and the negative impacts of illegal coca.
REGIONAL TRADE PROGRAM: USAID implements a regional program for trade
capacity building among the Andean countries, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador and Bolivia,
focusing on compliance with international trade obligations in areas such as,
labor, technical barriers to trade, and intellectual property rights.