Some countries are making huge progress and some countries are actually moving backwards. For example, Bangladesh is now on target to meet the goals. This is a dramatic thing.
There are two ingredients required. Political will is the bedrock issue. Without the political will--the will of governments and the will of society at large--the rest of it won't happen.
The other thing is resources. We need resources of different kinds to do this, and some of it's money. I wanted to say in partial answer to the earlier question that in fact we shouldn't assume that donor countries are the only ones making these investments. In the budget and the agreement on how to meet the cost of the Cairo plan of action, developing countries said they would contribute two-thirds of the cost and donor governments said they would pick up the remaining third. Fifteen years after Cairo, who has lived up to their commitment? It's the developing countries themselves, because they saw what a difference it made.
I want to say that if you have only one short-term investment to make, it needs to be in family planning. If those 215 million women had access to modern contraceptive supplies, the Guttmacher report, which is just out, tells us that you would reduce maternal mortality by 70% because you would have removed unintended pregnancies, which are the biggest problem.
Family planning is your quick win. I have given you six wins. Some of them are quick; most of them aren't, but it's for sure that an investment in family planning, which is safe, is really one of the best investments the G-8 and G-20 can make.