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Investment in Public
Services and Infrastructures
50. Alongside the establishment
of services and infrastructures of direct interest for farm production,
agrarian reform programmes must also envisage
large-scale investment in health, education, public transportation and the
supply of drinking-water.
In the rural areas of poor
countries, these social services and infrastructures are seriously deficient in
both quantity and quality. Their development prospects are poor owing to the
fact that the population of these areas has little ability to influence
political choices and that a major part of the costs would have to be met
either directly or indirectly — in other words, through some kind of taxation —
by large landowners.
These services are fundamental
for a modern way of life, and are also an indispensable component and factor in
the growth of material well-being. They are therefore a key factor in
sustainable development.
Their utility is not confined to
farmers and their families, but benefits the entire population by creating the
conditions for a differentiation in production activities, a growth in overall locallyproduced income, and a consequent stemming of the
rural exodus.
The dependable provision of these
services is therefore a necessary condition for the battle against rural
poverty and for containing the economic and social costs of urbanization. In
the context of agrarian reform, every effort must therefore be made to ensure
that public services and infrastructures of public utility in the rural areas
are as accessible, available, acceptable and economic as possible.
This applies particularly to
health: access to basic health structures and hospitals, widespread health
education and availability of simple, inexpensive remedies are vital in order
to reduce mortality and morbidity.
51. With regard to services,
maximum priority must be given to steps aimed at guaranteeing equal access to
elementary schooling and the extension of education to secondary and higher
levels for both young men and women.
Under such conditions, education
and professional training would not only offer each individual the means for
maximum development of his or her own potential, but also become determining
factors in bringing about the change in attitudes and behaviour
needed to face the complexity of the modern-day world without excessive costs.
The idea that education is a purely consumer expense and not a social
investment would thus be overcome.
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