News headlines for “Trade, Economy, & Related Issues”, page 484

  1. 1 in 2 Humans Cannot Celebrate World Toilet Day - This Is Why

    - Inter Press Service

    Did you know that half of the world’s population do not have toilets? And that, globally, at least 2 billion people use a drinking water source contaminated with faeces? And that every day, over 700 children under five years old die from diarrhoea linked to unsafe water, sanitation and poor hygiene?

    This is the dramatic, hushed reality of 3.6 billion people who don’t have one that works properly.

  2. Smart, sustainable maritime transport critical to global recovery: UNCTAD

    - UN News

    Although the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on maritime trade last year was less severe than expected, the knock-on effects will be far reaching and could transform the sector, the UN trade and development body, UNCTAD, said in its latest report, published on Thursday. 

  3. Children Address Unequal Access to Education During Pandemic

    - Inter Press Service

    DUBAI, Nov 18 (IPS) - In the whirl of effort nations are making to combat COVID-19, the powerful role that children and young people can play in overcoming the harmful effects of school closures is too easily overlooked.

  4. Double Solution to Ongoing Food and Climate Crises

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, Nov 17 (IPS) - For the last ten years, Angeline Wanjira’s food stall at Kirigiti Market in Kiambu County has featured the same foods, cabbages, potatoes and carrots, keeping with the community’s most preferred food types.

  5. Antimicrobial Resistance Calls for Brainpower of a Space Agency and Campaigning Zeal of an NGO

    - Inter Press Service

    Nov 17 (IPS) - The cost of infectious diseases is somewhere between staggering and incalculable. Around $8 trillion and 156 million life years were lost in 2016 alone. Throughout human history, pestilences have wiped out more lives than famine and violence.

  6. Why Covid-19 Misinformation Works

    - Inter Press Service

    SANTIAGO, Nov 17 (IPS) - At the United Nations General Assembly meeting in September, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro used his allotted time at the podium to recount his views on Covid-19. He extolled the virtues of treatments that have been rejected by scientists and proclaimed that he had benefitted from the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine.

  7. The Squid Game: The Story about Losers in the Shadow of Glory

    - Inter Press Service

    Seoul, Nov 16 (IPS) - Immediately after its release, the Squid Game went viral, grabbing the attention of the world's entertainment stage. The grotesque and hyper-violent thriller has reportedly become Netflix's biggest show, the world's most-watched and the most-talked-about streaming entertainment. Is it a case of art imitating life?

  8. Politicians Subsidise Fossil Fuel with Six Trillion Dollars in Just One Year

    - Inter Press Service

    MADRID, Nov 16 (IPS) - It sounds incredible: while politicians have been cackling about the climate emergency and profiling in empty promises to halt it, they have spent six trillion US dollars from taxpayers' money to subsidise fossil fuels in just one year: 2020. And they are set to increase the figure to nearly seven trillion by 2025.

  9. Push for Civil Registration Set to Hit Key Milestone in Asian and Pacific Countries

    - Inter Press Service

    BANGKOK, Thailand, Nov 16 (IPS) - Most countries in the Asia-Pacific region are on track to reach universal birth registration by 2030: an incredible achievement and a significant milestone in realizing human rights and equality. However, as the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed, many weaknesses remain in official recording systems, creating gaps in knowledge about the population and affecting how authorities respond to crises and reach those in greatest need.

  10. How Effective Communication can Help Boost Intra-African Trade

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, Nov 16 (IPS) - The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement promotes socio-economic growth and development in Africa through liberalised trade processes and structures. So far, the 54 African countries have signed the agreement, resulting in immense potential for the growth of trade between African countries.

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