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加勒比海島國 巴貝多 總理 倡議新全球金融峰會

(2023-07-09 05:22:18) 下一個

加勒比海島國 巴貝多 總理 倡議 新全球金融峰會

 

Mia Mottley (Oct 1, 1965-), is a Barbadian politician and attorney who has served as the eighth prime minister of Barbados since 2018 and as Leader of the Barbados Labour Party since 2008. Mottley is the first woman to hold either position. 

Education: United Nations International School, London School of Economics and Political Science, Queen's College

巴巴多斯總理領導推動全球金融轉型

https://dialogochino.net/en/climate-energy/367248-barbados-prime-minister-leads-push-to-transform-global-finance/

米婭·莫特利再次呼籲世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織支持麵臨貧困和氣候威脅的窮國

Barbados prime minister leads push to transform global finance
https://dialogochino.net/en/climate-energy/367248-barbados-prime-minister-leads-push-to-transform-global-finance/ 

米婭·莫特利 (Mia Mottley) 於 2021 年 11 月在格拉斯哥舉行的 COP26 氣候峰會上發表講話。巴巴多斯總理帶頭呼籲改革發展融資,以更好地支持氣候脆弱國家

弗拉維亞·米爾霍蘭斯 弗拉維亞·米爾霍蘭斯 2023 年 4 月 13 日
巴巴多斯總理米婭·莫特利近年來成為發展中國家推動氣候融資的領軍人物,她在世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織(IMF)之前再次呼籲改革全球發展金融體係。 每年春季會議。

在 4 月 10 日星期一在華盛頓特區舉行的為期一周的會議之前,莫特利和洛克菲勒基金會主席拉吉夫·沙阿寫道,國際金融機構在支持貧窮國家方麵“做得還不夠” 麵臨多重危機,包括氣候災害、貧困和日益嚴重的饑餓。 他們表示:“當人類麵臨曆史上一些最嚴重的危機時,應對措施不足使各國和人民感到越來越孤獨。”

加勒比國家的平均債務與國內生產總值的比率。 世界銀行表示,雖然這不是衡量經濟健康狀況的簡單指標,但高於 77% 的比率可能會阻礙經濟增長。

他們補充說,會議議程“沒有令人樂觀的理由”,無法相信那些負債累累、無力應對氣候危機的低收入國家將會獲得幫助。 其中很多都在莫特利所在的加勒比地區,那裏的島國極易受到極端天氣的影響,而債務水平平均占 GDP 的 90%。

莫特利於 2018 年上任,獲得超過 70% 的選票,成為自 1966 年巴巴多斯脫離英國獨立以來第一位擔任該職位的女性。她長期活躍於該國政壇,致力於反對汙染、氣候變化和森林砍伐,並 聯合國環境規劃署稱,巴巴多斯已成為“全球環境運動的領跑者”。

這位巴巴多斯領導人自2022年11月在埃及舉行的COP27氣候峰會上發表備受讚譽的演講以來,受到了越來越多的國際關注。在開幕式上,她呼籲發達國家為氣候脆弱國家提供資金。 “如果沒有優惠資金,發展中國家就無法打這場仗,”她說。

在會議上,莫特利還發起了布裏奇敦倡議,這是一個由私人、公共和慈善領袖組成的國際聯盟,旨在改革全球金融架構。 她首先在格拉斯哥舉行的 2021 年聯合國氣候峰會 COP26 上提出了這一想法,並於 2022 年 7 月在巴巴多斯首都布裏奇敦主辦了一次會議,進一步完善其提案,該倡議也因此得名。

如果沒有優惠資金,發展中國家就無法打這場仗

布裏奇敦倡議的核心信息是,低收入國家需要新的方式來減輕債務,進而投資於氣候適應能力和緩解措施。 該組織希望世界銀行、國際貨幣基金組織等多邊金融機構牽頭每年籌集超過1萬億美元資金,支持發展中國家實現可持續發展和氣候目標,並彌補極端天氣事件造成的損失和損害 。

世界銀行-國際貨幣基金組織春季會議匯聚了各國央行行長、部長、私營部門高管、民間社會代表和學者。 巴巴多斯沒有派代表參加華盛頓的活動,而是選擇專注於為其全球聯盟製定一項推動金融改革的戰略。

法國總統馬克龍已經支持布裏奇敦倡議,該倡議是莫特利三月份訪問巴黎期間談判的核心。 他們的下一次會議可能會在六月舉行的新全球金融協定峰會上舉行,該峰會由馬克龍召集,將尋求以該倡議的改革呼籲為基礎。

巴西前總統迪爾瑪·羅塞夫與現任總統盧拉·達席爾瓦交談,建議觀點:巴西不能忽視迫在眉睫的全球債務危機

在其他地方,美國總統氣候特使約翰·克裏也對莫特利的多邊金融改革想法表示開放。 巴巴多斯總理甚至得到了包括國際貨幣基金組織總裁克裏斯塔利娜·格奧爾基耶娃在內的金融機構領導人的支持。

在周一的春季會議開幕式上,格奧爾基耶娃評論說,世界麵臨的危機“將負擔推回”到窮人身上,並呼籲“進行結構性改革以提高生產力”並為各國經濟增長提供前景。 世界銀行集團行長戴維·馬爾帕斯在與格奧爾基耶娃的討論中補充道,在債務危機和極端氣候不斷加劇的情況下,“政策改變迫在眉睫”。 不過,他並未明確說明這些變化是否包括金融體係改革。

但關於世界銀行是否會改變其貸款模式或如何解決貧困和全球變暖問題可能需要更長的時間才能得到回答,特別是在高層過渡時期。 在接下來的幾周內,馬爾帕斯預計將把權力移交給萬事達卡前首席執行官兼國際商會主席阿賈伊·班加(Ajay Banga)。馬爾帕斯因銀行對氣候行動的承諾以及他在氣候變化問題上的個人立場而麵臨激烈的批評和壓力。 

巴巴多斯總理為重組全球氣候融資而奮鬥

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-65962997

作者:Justin Rowlatt 氣候編輯,巴黎 2023 年 6 月 22 日

巴巴多斯總理米婭·莫特利巴巴多斯總理米婭·莫特利表示,富裕國家必須幫助發展中國家為氣候變化的影響付出代價

周四在巴黎舉行的世界領導人會議可能會為較貧窮國家提供數千億美元來應對氣候變化。

巴巴多斯第一位女總理米婭·莫特利正在領導全球爭取這筆資金的鬥爭,她告訴英國廣播公司新聞,她的小國迫切需要幫助。

較貧窮的國家想要更多的錢,因為它們幾乎沒有采取任何行動來引起氣候變化,但卻麵臨著最嚴重的影響。

他們還難以負擔可再生能源等昂貴的項目。

氣候融資,包括防洪或太陽能發電廠的資金,長期以來一直是氣候談判的最大症結之一。

但莫特利女士建立了一個全球聯盟來支持她對國際金融體係進行根本改革的要求。

莫特利女士在巴黎告訴英國廣播公司新聞,“我們都在一起”。 “如果我們沒有意識到這一點,我們就不會采取必要的緊急行動來拯救地球和拯救生命。”

巴巴多斯總理與法國總統馬克龍共同主辦巴黎會議。

一名婦女在沙袋牆上行走,沙袋是為了防止侵蝕而放置的。圖片來源,蓋蒂圖片社 圖片說明,

馬爾代夫等島國希望幫助建立防禦措施,抵禦與氣候變化有關的洪水

數十位世界領導人出席新全球融資協定峰會,其中包括德國總理、巴西總統、世界銀行新任行長以及中國總理和美國財政部長。

英國將派出發展部長安德魯·米切爾。

莫特利女士決心會議取得成果。

她將氣候變化的威脅描述為對世界的“死刑”。 “如果是死刑,那麽我們需要緊急采取行動,”她解釋道。

峰會內部人士預計將宣布一項名為特別提款權 (SDR) 的國際貨幣價值 1000 億美元的目標已經實現。

這些資產將轉移到低收入國家用於氣候計劃。

但莫特利女士的目標還有更大的目標,即一項以巴巴多斯首都命名的“布裏奇敦議程”計劃。

它希望通過國際貨幣體係的全麵現代化為最需要資金的國家創造更多資金。

目前的機構 - 包括世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織(IMF) - 是由戰勝國在第二次世界大戰即將結束時在美國新罕布什爾州布雷頓森林滑雪勝地舉行的一次會議上建立的

所謂的“布雷頓森林體係”明年將迎來80周年。

莫特利女士表示,她希望將重點從富裕國家轉移到交付造福全世界的成果上,例如幫助發展中國家應對氣候變化,從而使其適應現代世界的挑戰。

水庫水位低與幹旱有關 圖片來源,蓋蒂圖片社 圖片說明,

全球氣溫上升,許多國家麵臨極端幹旱

“這些機構之所以存在,是因為它們的創建是為了幫助世界進行第二次世界大戰後的重建工作。就氣候而言,我們正處於一個與第二次世界大戰同等的時刻,”她說。

本周,國際能源署警告稱,如果世界要避免氣候變化帶來的最嚴重影響,到 2030 年代初期,發展中國家清潔能源的年度投資需要從 2022 年的 7700 億美元增加兩倍,達到 2.8 兆美元。

其中一項建議是,世界銀行等機構為氣候行動項目提供更便宜的貸款。

莫特利女士指出,巴巴多斯或安哥拉的防洪設施建設成本比荷蘭或英國高得多。

架設風力渦輪機或安裝太陽能發電場也是如此。

這是因為低收入國家被收取高利率——通常是發達國家利率的兩倍甚至三倍。

然而,各個項目的風險差異並不那麽大。

另一項建議是,世界銀行等機構應同意為發展中國家的氣候行動提供貸款擔保。 這將鼓勵私營部門以較低的利率放貸。

專家表示,這些舉措可為低收入國家的氣候項目帶來價值數千億美元的貸款。

另一項提議涉及設立拍賣會,發展中國家將為氣候項目競標廉價融資。

這個“減緩氣候變化信托基金”將由價值數百億美元的特別提款權提供資金,並由國際貨幣基金組織和聯合國監督。

獲勝者將是最快減少全球變暖的項目。

預計不會對這些提案做出最終決定,但莫特利女士相信將會取得進展。

莫特利女士說,我們告訴孩子們今天要做的事情不應該推遲到明天。

“我發現自己實際上重複了很多我們會對孩子們說的話,以便為當今的全球行為提供信息,”她繼續說道。 “這告訴我們很多。”

秘書長在峰會上表示,全球金融架構未能履行為發展中國家提供安全網的使命,呼籲緊急改革

聯合國秘書長安東尼奧·古特雷斯,2023 年 6 月 22 日

https://press.un.org/en/2023/sgsm21855.doc.htm

以下是聯合國秘書長安東尼奧·古特雷斯今天在巴黎舉行的新全球融資協定巴黎峰會上的講話:

親愛的埃馬紐埃爾·馬克龍,感謝您在充滿挑戰的國際背景下組織這次重要的峰會。 親愛的米婭·莫特利,感謝您在布裏奇敦倡議框架內所做的努力。 這為解決眾多發展中國家麵臨的困難提供了良好的基礎。 因為什麽都不做不是一種選擇。

國際金融體係陷入危機。 距 2030 年最後期限已過半,可持續發展目標與日俱增。 經過幾十年的進步,即使是關於饑餓和貧困的最基本目標也發生了逆轉。

是的,到2023年,將有超過7.5億人吃不飽。 還有數千萬人在極端貧困的邊緣搖搖欲墜。 COVID-19大流行和俄羅斯入侵烏克蘭加劇了局勢。

雖然富裕國家可以印鈔來重振經濟,但發展中國家卻不能這樣做,並且正在努力應對過高的借貸成本——比發達國家高出八倍。

許多領導人麵臨著痛苦的選擇:償還債務還是滿足人民的需求。 許多非洲國家現在用於償還債務的支出超過了醫療保健的支出。 給整整幾代人帶來可怕的後果。

如今,有 52 個國家陷入違約或瀕臨違約。 這包括大多數最不發達國家,以及最容易受到氣候變化影響的 50 個國家中的大多數。 其他數十個國家也麵臨加入它們的風險。

這種情況是站不住腳的。 顯然,國際金融架構未能履行為發展中國家提供全球安全網的使命。

原因很簡單,就像 Mia Mottley 剛才告訴我們的那樣,這座建築是在二戰後建造的。 即使有一些變化,它本質上也反映了當時的政治和經濟權力動態。

想想看:當今超過四分之三的國家沒有出席布雷頓森林機構、世界銀行和國際貨幣基金組織(IMF)的創建。 對於聯合國和安理會來說,情況也好不到哪裏去。

近 80 年後,全球金融架構已經過時、功能失調且不公正。 它不再能夠滿足二十一世紀世界的需求:一個以經濟和金融市場深度一體化為特征的多極世界,但也以地緣政治緊張局勢和日益增長的係統性風險為特征。

國際金融機構現在規模太小,能力有限,無法履行其職責並為所有人服務,特別是最脆弱的國家。 例如,世界銀行的實收資本占全球國內生產總值 (GDP) 的比例現在還不到 1960 年的五分之一,盡管挑戰要大得多。

更糟糕的是,全球金融體係使不平等現象長期存在,甚至加劇。 2021 年,國際貨幣基金組織分配了超過 6500 億美元的特別提款權,我們對此決定表示讚賞。 包括我國在內的歐盟國家收到了 1600 億美元。 非洲國家:340億美元。

換句話說,歐洲公民平均獲得的收入是非洲公民的近13倍。 這一切都是按照規則進行的。 但是,讓我們承認:這些規則已經變得非常不道德。 在地緣政治本身就是分裂因素的世界中,不能代表當今世界的金融架構麵臨著導致自身分裂的風險。

如果不進行認真的改革,這場危機就不可能得到認真的解決。 我呼籲建立一個新的布雷頓森林體係——各國政府齊心協力,重新審視和重新配置二十一世紀的全球金融架構的時刻。

本月早些時候,作為我們未來峰會籌備工作的一部分,我提出了一份政策簡報——一份重新設計的全球金融架構的詳細藍圖,該架構能夠成為所有國家的安全網。

我不抱任何幻想。 這是一個權力和政治意願的問題,改變不會在一夜之間發生。 但是,當我們努力進行必要的深入改革時,我們今天就可以采取緊急行動,以滿足發展中經濟體和新興經濟體的迫切需求。

這就是為什麽我提出每年 5000 億美元的 SDG(可持續發展目標)刺激措施,用於可持續發展和氣候行動的投資。 它包括全球領導人現在可以采取的具體步驟。

他們可以建立一個真正有效且及時有效的債務減免機製,支持暫停付款、延長貸款期限和降低利率,包括針對具有特殊脆弱性(即與氣候相關的脆弱性)的中等收入國家。

他們可以通過增加資本基礎和改變多邊開發銀行的業務模式來擴大發展和氣候融資,並允許進行更強有力的協調來改變其應對風險的方法,而不會冒著 AAA [評級] 的風險,並且可以說很多 在我看來,[評級]機構所發揮的作用存在嚴重偏見,並導致了我們所麵臨的許多危機,同時它們也改變了應對風險的方式,以發展中國家負擔得起的成本大規模利用私人融資。

今天已經有很多關於需要更多保證的說法。 世界領導人可以通過更廣泛地重新分配未使用的特別提款權以及使用其他創新機製來增加全球流動性,從而擴大對有需要的國家的應急融資。

非洲開發銀行將[特別提款權]重新分配給多邊開發銀行的舉措可能會將其影響擴大五倍。 這個例子應該被擴展。 全球領導人可以建立一種機製,在危機時期自動發行[特別提款權],並根據需要進行分配。 他們可以對碳定價並終止化石燃料補貼,並將其重新用於更可持續和更具生產力的用途。

我們現在可以做的事情清單還在不斷增加。 接下來的兩天將有助於推動事情向前發展。 總的來說,這些步驟將有助於戰勝貧困和饑餓,振興發展中國家和新興經濟體,並支持對健康、教育和氣候行動的投資。

我們不必等待國際金融架構的徹底改革。 我們現在就可以采取措施,向全球正義邁出一大步。

我充分意識到我們麵臨的挑戰和阻力。 當今世界的權力動態和全球合作的限製使問題更加難以解決。 但是,解決方案並非不可能。 我們現在就可以開始了。 您的討論可以為有需要的人帶來有意義的結果。 我敦促你們使這次會議不僅成為變革的呐喊,而且成為戰鬥的呐喊——呼籲采取緊急行動的戰鬥口號。 我們正處於真相和清算的時刻。 隻要我們齊心協力,就能讓這成為充滿希望的時刻。 謝謝。

國際貨幣基金組織總裁在新全球融資協議峰會上的講話

已準備好交付 2023 年 6 月 22 日
https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2023/06/22/sp062223-md-remarks-at-summit-for-new-global-financing-pact

  克裏斯塔利娜·格奧爾基耶娃

感謝馬克龍總統主辦本次峰會,並為債務、氣候和發展融資等重要問題帶來如此令人難以置信的能量。

感謝你們將新任世界銀行行長阿賈伊·班加和我首次以新的角色一起登上舞台。

為了充分披露,我們之前曾一起上台討論女性賦權和金融包容性。 我毫不懷疑,在我們機構合作的下一個篇章中,我們將成為偉大的合作夥伴。

一個快速變化且不平衡的世界

首先我要說的是,國際貨幣基金組織和世界銀行成立於1944年,此後世界發生了巨大變化。 當時有99個國家。

現在這個數字增加了一倍多——國際貨幣基金組織有 190 個成員國——因此,僅憑這一點,布雷頓森林機構就與它們創建時截然不同。

與此同時,全球人口增加了兩倍多,世界經濟(以 GDP 衡量)增長了 10 倍多。 簡單的數學計算意味著人均收入增加了兩倍多。

因此,我們擁有一個更加豐富的世界。 但這是一個嚴重失衡的世界。

第一,有的地方有青年,有的地方有資本。 除非我們架起一座橋梁,讓資本流向年輕人[以創造就業機會和繁榮],否則我們不僅會破壞增長前景,還會破壞全球穩定。

二、氣候。 無論過去還是現在,排放源主要位於發達經濟體和大型新興市場經濟體。 但影響最大的地方在哪裏呢? 可悲的是,在那些沒有采取任何措施製造問題的國家。 我們必須搭建一座橋梁來幫助解決這種不平衡問題。

第三,應對快速變化、更容易受到衝擊的世界的財務能力。 有些地方的財政資源比其他地方要多得多。

因此,我們的機構肩負著巨大的責任,為當今世界和明天的世界做必要的事情。

適應機構

對於基金組織和世行來說,這意味著必須改變思維方式。 我們必須認識到,從本質上講,我們的任務是相同的,但我們執行這些任務的方式應該發生巨大變化。

對於國際貨幣基金組織來說,我們有一個明確的使命:宏觀經濟和金融穩定、增長和就業。

但要在我所描述的世界中實施這一使命——考慮到我們麵臨的不平衡——需要我們采取更全麵的觀點。 這在實踐中意味著什麽?

這意味著更全麵地了解人們的複原力——確保他們受教育、健康並擁有良好的社會保護。

這意味著要更全麵地看待社會的韌性——而不僅僅是銀行業——因為當社會不公平和不公正時,經濟就無法為所有人帶來最好的成果。

當然,對於我們星球的恢複能力,還有更全麵的看法。

當我們采取更全麵、更全麵的方法來完成我們的任務時,這要求我們審視我們的工作方式、我們的優先事項是什麽以及我們部署什麽工具。

資源充足重振多邊主義

顯然,由於我所描述的不平衡,世行和基金組織的首要任務是動員更多優惠和贈款融資。

從減貧與增長信托基金(PRGT)開始。 我們幾乎已經達到了滿足需求所需的資源。

然而,需求更高,利率更高,因此我們需要更多的補貼資源來彌補貸方收到的市場利率與我們承諾向最脆弱的借款人提供的低於市場利率之間的差額。 這一補貼缺口達 12 億美元。

我在本次峰會上的呼籲是縮小這一差距。

我和班加總統將於10月赴摩洛哥出席國際貨幣基金組織和世界銀行年會。 這將是半個世紀以來會議首次在非洲大陸舉行。

我們將前往那裏為非洲提供服務,這意味著擁有強大的國際開發協會(IDA)和強大的貧困和貧困稅。

我們還承諾幫助重新調整特別提款權(SDR)的渠道。 因此,如果擁有強大儲備地位並接受特別提款權的國家不需要特別提款權,它們就應該通過國際貨幣基金組織或多邊開發銀行將特別提款權借給其他國家。

此類資金重組的目標定為 1000 億美元。 今天我可以宣布我們已經實現了這一目標。

現在,我們必須揚起我們的雄心。

在特別提款權渠道方麵,我們首先要求各國提供 2021 年撥款的 20%。 然後我們達到了 30%。 現在我們的要價已提高到 40%。

今天,我們有近 600 億美元的承諾將通過韌性和可持續發展信托基金 (RST) 以及 PRGT 提供。

對於複原力和可持續發展信托基金,我非常自豪地宣布,我們已經籌集了超過 400 億美元的資金,接近我們最初的目標。 今天,我利用這次會議要求我們將我們的雄心壯誌再增加 200 億美元——因為我們現在已經有了概念驗證。

我們已經有 7 個國家受益,並希望明年還有另外 10 個國家受益。

可以肯定的是,對 RST 的需求非常強勁。 為什麽? 我們曆史上首次提供長期融資——還款期為 20 年,寬限期為 10 年。 我們正在以優惠條件向脆弱的中等收入國家提供融資。

在實施 RST 過程中,我們正在與世界銀行密切合作。 我們三分之二的 RST 項目的基礎是世界銀行的分析,例如國家氣候和發展報告。

今天,我們將宣布 RST 如何與歐洲投資銀行、非洲開發銀行和美洲開發銀行等其他機構合作,這表明我們兌現了我們的承諾:我們正在共同行動。

我想以以下幾點作為結束語。

我們知道,過去幾十年來,人均收入增長了數倍。

但是,正如我的統計學教授常說的:如果你把頭放進冰箱,把腳放進烤箱,你的溫度會是平均水平——但你會死的。

我為什麽這麽說呢? 如果我們不重新啟動收入趨同的引擎,那麽對於收入水平較低、收入滯後的人們來說,全球平均收入增長的事實不會對他們的生活產生任何影響。

我們的機構致力於確保這不是世界的命運。

謝謝。

Barbados prime minister leads push to transform global finance

https://dialogochino.net/en/climate-energy/367248-barbados-prime-minister-leads-push-to-transform-global-finance/ 

Mia Mottley renews calls for World Bank and IMF to support poor countries facing poverty and climate threats

<p>Mia Mottley addresses the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, November 2021. The Barbados prime minister is leading calls to reform development finance to better support climate-vulnerable countries (Image: <a  data-cke-saved-href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/186938113@N07/51648481440/" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/186938113@N07/51648481440/">Karwai Tang </a>/  <a class="c-link"  data-cke-saved-href="https://www.flickr.com/people/186938113@N07/" href="https://www.flickr.com/people/186938113@N07/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-stringify-link="https://www.flickr.com/people/186938113@N07/" data-sk="tooltip_parent" aria-describedby="sk-tooltip-1860">COP 26</a>, <a  data-cke-saved-href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/">CC BY-NC-ND 2.0</a>)</p>

Mia Mottley addresses the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, November 2021. The Barbados prime minister is leading calls to reform development finance to better support climate-vulnerable countries (Image: Karwai Tang /  COP 26CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Flávia Milhorance   April 13, 2023

Having emerged in recent years as a leading voice in the developing world’s push for climate finance, Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, renewed her calls for reform of the global development finance system ahead of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) annual spring meetings.

In the lead-up to the week-long gathering in Washington DC, which opened on Monday 10 April, Mottley and Rajiv Shah, the president of the Rockefeller Foundation, wrote that international financial institutions have “not yet done enough” to support poor countries that face multiple converging crises, including climate disasters, poverty and increasing hunger. “When humanity is facing some of the gravest crises in history, an inadequate response has left countries and people feeling increasingly alone,” they said.

90%

The average debt-to-GDP ratio of Caribbean nations. Though not a simple metric of an economy’s health, a ratio above 77% can hinder economic growth, according to the World Bank.

The meeting’s agendas, they added, “offer little reason for optimism” to believe help will come for lower-income countries that are swamped by debt and unable to deal with the climate crisis. Among them are many in Mottley’s own region, the Caribbean, where island nations are highly vulnerable to extreme weather, while debt levels average 90% of GDP.

Mottley took office in 2018 with more than 70% of the vote, becoming the first woman to hold the position since Barbados gained independence from Britain in 1966. Long active in the country’s politics, she has campaigned against pollution, climate change and deforestation, and turned Barbados into “a frontrunner in the global environmental movement”, according to the United Nations Environment Programme.

The Barbadian leader has garnered increasing international attention since she delivered a lauded speech at the COP27 climate summit in Egypt in November 2022. At the opening ceremony, she called on developed countries to unlock funding for climate-vulnerable countries. “There is no way that developing countries can fight this battle without access to concessional funding,” she said.

At the conference, Mottley also launched the Bridgetown Initiative, an international coalition made of private, public and philanthropic leaders seeking to reform the global financial architecture. She had first proposed the idea at the 2021 UN climate summit, COP26 in Glasgow, and in July 2022 hosted a meeting to further develop its proposals in Bridgetown, the capital of Barbados that lends the initiative its name.

There is no way developing countries can fight this battle without access to concessional funding
Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados

The core message of the Bridgetown Initiative is that lower-income countries need new ways to relieve debt and, in turn, invest in climate resilience and mitigation. The group wants the World Bank, IMF and other multilateral financial institutions to take the lead in raising over US$1 trillion a year to support developing countries’ sustainable development and climate goals, as well as making up for loss and damage caused by extreme weather events.

The World Bank–IMF spring meetings bring together central bankers, ministers, private sector executives, civil society representatives and academics. Barbados has not sent a representative to the Washington event, choosing to focus instead on building a strategy for its global coalition that will push for financial reforms.

French president Emmanuel Macron has already backed the Bridgetown Initiative, which was at the centre of the talks during Mottley’s visit to Paris in March. Their next meeting may come in June at the Summit for a New Global Financial Pact, convened by Macron and which will seek to build on the initiative’s calls for reform.

Former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff speaks with current president Lula da Silva

Elsewhere, John Kerry, the United States’ special presidential envoy for climate, has also expressed openness to Mottley’s ideas for multilateral finance reform. The Barbados prime minister has even attracted support from the financial institutions’ leaders, including Kristalina Georgieva, the managing director of the IMF.

At an opening of the spring meetings on Monday, Georgieva commented that the crises the world faces “have pushed the burden back” onto poor people, and made calls for “structural reforms to uplift productivity” and offer prospects for countries’ growth. In discussion with Georgieva was David Malpass, the president of the World Bank Group, who added that “there is an urgency for policy changes” amid mounting debt crises and climate extremes. He was not explicit, however, on whether these changes included reforms to the financial system.

But questions on whether the World Bank will change its lending model or how it will address poverty and global warming may take longer to be answered, particularly during a transition period at the top. In the coming weeks, Malpass – who has faced fierce criticism and pressure over the bank’s commitment to climate action and his personal stance on climate change – is expected to hand over to Ajay Banga, previously chief executive at Mastercard and a chair of the International Chamber of Commerce.

Barbados PM fights for shake-up of global climate finance

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-65962997

By Justin Rowlatt Climate editor in Paris 

Barbados Prime Minister Mia MottleyBarbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley says rich nations must help developing countries pay for impacts of climate change

World leaders meeting in Paris on Thursday could give poorer countries access to hundreds of billions of dollars to tackle climate change.

Mia Mottley, Barbados' first female PM, is leading the global fight for this money and tells BBC News that her tiny country urgently needs help.

Poorer nations want more money because they did little to cause climate change but face its worst effects.

They also struggle to afford expensive projects like renewable energy.

Climate finance, including funding for flood defences or solar plants, has long been one of the biggest sticking points in climate negotiations.

But Ms Mottley has built a global coalition to support her demand that the international financial system be fundamentally reformed.

"We are all in this together", Ms Mottley told BBC News in Paris. "If we don't realise that, we will not act with the urgency that's necessary to save the planet and save lives."

The Barbadian prime minister is joint host of the Paris conference with President Emmanuel Macron of France.

A woman walks on a wall of sandbags, placed to prevent erosionIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption,

Island nations like the Maldives want help to build defences against flooding linked to climate change

Dozens of world leaders are attending the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact, including the German Chancellor, the president of Brazil and the new president of the World Bank as well as the prime minister of China and the US Treasury Secretary.

The UK is sending its minister for development, Andrew Mitchell.

Ms Mottley is determined the meeting deliver results.

She describes the threat of climate change as "a death sentence" on the world. "If it is a death sentence, then we need to move with urgency," she explains.

Insiders at the summit are expecting an announcement that a target for $100bn worth of a kind of international currency called Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) has been met.

These assets will be transferred to low-income countries to be used for climate programmes.

But Ms Mottley has an even bigger prize in her sights, a plan dubbed the "Bridgetown Agenda" after the Barbadian capital.

It wants to generate more finance for the countries that need it most through a wholesale modernisation of the international monetary system.

The current institutions - including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) - were set up by the victorious nations towards the end of the Second World War at a conference in a ski resort called Bretton Woods in New Hampshire, US

The so-called "Bretton Woods system" will celebrate its 80th anniversary next year.

Ms Mottley says she wants to make it fit for the challenges of the modern world by moving the focus away from richer nations and towards delivering outcomes that benefit the entire world, like helping developing countries tackle climate change.

Low reservoir levels linked to droughtIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption,

Many countries are facing extreme drought as global temperature rises

"The reason why these institutions exist is that they were created to help the world in the reconstruction effort after World War Two. We are in a moment that is equal to World War Two with respect to climate," she said.

This week the International Energy Agency warned annual investments in clean energy in developing nations will need to triple from $770bn in 2022 to as much as $2.8tn by the early 2030s if the world is to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

One proposal is that institutions like the World Bank offer cheaper loans for climate action projects.

It is much more expensive to build flood defences in Barbados or Angola than it is in the Netherlands or the UK, Ms Mottley points out.

The same goes for erecting wind turbines or installing solar farms.

That is because low-income countries are charged high interest rates - often two or even three times the rates developed nations face.

Yet the risks of individual projects don't vary anywhere near as much as that.

Another suggestion is that institutions like the World Bank should agree to guarantee loans for climate action in developing nations. That would encourage the private sector to lend at lower interest rates.

Experts say these initiatives could generate hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of loans for climate projects in low-income countries.

Another proposal involves the creation of an auction in which developing nations would bid for cheap finance for climate projects.

This "Climate Mitigation Trust Fund" would be funded by tens of billions of dollars' worth of SDRs and overseen by the IMF and the UN.

The winners would be the projects that reduce global warming fastest.

It is not expected that a final decision will be made on these proposals, but Ms Mottley is confident that progress will be made.

We tell our children we shouldn't put off to tomorrow what we need to do today, Ms Mottley says.

"I find myself actually repeating a lot of things that we would say to children, in order to inform global behaviour today," she continues. "That tells us a lot."

Global Financial Architecture Has Failed Mission to Provide Developing Countries with Safety Net, Secretary-General Tells Summit, Calling for Urgent Reforms

UN Secretary-General António Guterres, 22 June 2023

 

https://press.un.org/en/2023/sgsm21855.doc.htm 

Following are UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ remarks to the Paris Summit for a New Global Financing Pact, in Paris today:

Dear Emmanuel Macron, thank you for organizing this important Summit, amidst an international context fraught with challenges.  And thank you, dear Mia Mottley, for the efforts undertaken within the framework of the Bridgetown Initiative.  This provides a remarkable foundation to address the difficulties faced by numerous developing countries.  Because doing nothing is not an option.

The international financial system is in crisis.  Halfway to the 2030 deadline, the Sustainable Development Goals are drifting further away by the day.  Even the most fundamental goals on hunger and poverty have gone into reverse after decades of progress.

Yes, in 2023, more than 750 million people do not have enough to eat.  And tens of millions more are teetering on the verge of extreme poverty.  The COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine have exacerbated the situation.

While wealthy countries could print money to revive their economies, developing countries could not do likewise and are grappling with exorbitant borrowing costs — up to eight times higher than those of developed countries.

Many leaders face an agonizing choice: servicing their debt or meeting the needs of their populations.  Many African countries now spend more on debt repayments than on health care.  With terrible consequences for entire generations.

Today, 52 countries are in default or dangerously close to it. This includes the majority of least developed countries, as well as the majority of the 50 countries most vulnerable to climate change.  Dozens of other nations are at risk of joining them.

This situation is untenable.  It is clear that the international financial architecture has failed in its mission to provide a global safety net for developing countries.

The reason is simple, like Mia Mottley just told us, this architecture was built in the aftermath of World War II.  It essentially reflects, even with some changes, the political and economic power dynamics of that time.

Consider this:  over three quarters of today's countries were not present at the creation of the Bretton Woods institutions the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). And the situation is no better for the United Nations and the Security Council, particularly.

Nearly 80 years later, the global financial architecture is outdated, dysfunctional, and unjust.  It is no longer capable of meeting the needs of the twenty-first century world:  a multipolar world characterized by deeply integrated economies and financial markets, but also marked by geopolitical tensions and growing systemic risks.

International financial institutions are now too small and limited to fulfil their mandate and serve everyone, especially the most vulnerable countries.  For example, the World Bank's paid-in capital as a percentage of global gross domestic product (GDP) is now less than a fifth of what it was in 1960 — even though the challenges are far greater.

Even worse, the global financial system perpetuates and even exacerbates inequalities.  In 2021, and we applaud this decision, the International Monetary Fund allocated over $650 billion in special drawing rights. European Union countries, including my own, received $160 billion.  African countries: $34 billion.

In other words, European citizens received on average nearly 13 times more than African citizens.  This was all done by the rules.  But, let us acknowledge: these rules have become profoundly immoral.  A financial architecture which does not represent today’s world is at risk of leading to its own fragmentation in a world where geopolitics is in itself a factor for fragmentation.

There will be no serious solution to this crisis without serious reforms.  I have called for a new Bretton Woods moment — a moment for Governments to come together, re-examine and re-configure the global financial architecture for the twenty-first century.

And earlier this month, as part of our preparations for the Summit of the Future, I put forward a Policy Brief — a detailed blueprint for a redesigned global financial architecture capable of serving as a safety net for all countries.

I have no illusions.  This is a question of power and political will, and change will not happen overnight.  But, as we work for the deep reforms that are needed, we can take urgent action today to meet the urgent needs of developing and emerging economies.

That is why I have proposed an SDG [Sustainable Development Goals] Stimulus of $500 billion per year for investments in sustainable development and climate action.  It includes concrete steps global leaders can take right now.

They can establish a really effective and time effective debt relief mechanism that supports payment suspensions, longer lending terms and lower rates, including for middle income countries with particular vulnerabilities, namely in relation to climate.

They can scale up development and climate finance by increasing the capital base and changing the business model of multilateral development banks and allowing in a much stronger coordination to transform their approach to risk, without risking the AAA [rating] and a lot could be said about the role played by [ratings] agencies that are, in my opinion, deeply biased and have contributed to many of the crises we have faced, and, simultaneously, transforming their approach to risk to massively leverage private finance at affordable cost to developing countries.

And lot has been said today about the need for more guarantees. World leaders can expand contingency financing to countries in need, by rechannelling, in broader scale, unused special drawing rights, and by using other innovative mechanisms to increase global liquidity.

The African Development Bank initiative to re-channel [special drawing rights] to multilateral development banks could multiply their impact by five.  This example should be expanded.  Global leaders can put in place a mechanism to issue [special drawing rights] automatically in times of crisis and distribute them according to need.  They can put a price on carbon and end fossil-fuel subsidies and repurpose them towards more sustainable and productive uses.

And the list of things we can do now goes on and on.  The two next days will be useful to take things forward.  Taken together, these steps would help to beat poverty and hunger, uplift developing and emerging economies and support investments in health, education and climate action.

We don’t have to wait for root and branch reform of the international financial architecture.  We can take steps right now and take a giant leap towards global justice.

I am fully aware of the challenges and headwinds we face. Power dynamics and constraints on global cooperation in today’s world make problems more difficult to solve.  But, solutions are not impossible.  And we can start now.  Your discussions can yield meaningful results for people in need.  I urge you to make this meeting not just a cri du cœur for change, but a cri de guerre — a rallying cry for urgent action.  We are at a moment of truth and reckoning.  Together, we can make it a moment of hope.  Thank you.

IMF Managing Director Remarks at the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact

As Prepared for Delivery  June 22, 2023

https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2023/06/22/sp062223-md-remarks-at-summit-for-new-global-financing-pact

 Kristalina Georgieva

Thank you, President Macron, for hosting this Summit and for bringing such incredible energy to these important issues of debt, climate, and financing for development.

And thank you for bringing the new World Bank President, Ajay Banga, and me on stage together for the first time in our new roles.

For full disclosure, we have been on stage together before, discussing women’s empowerment and financial inclusion. I have no doubt that we will be great partners in the next chapter of our institutions’ work together.

A rapidly changing and unbalanced world

Let me start by saying that the IMF and the World Bank were created in 1944 and since then the world has changed dramatically. At that time, there were 99 countries.

Now there is more than double that number – the IMF has 190 members – so on that basis alone the Bretton Woods institutions are dramatically different to when they were created.

At the same time, the global population more than tripled, and the world economy – as measured by GDP -- increased more than 10 times. The simple math means that the average income per capita has more than tripled.

So, we have a richer world. But it is a world with huge imbalances.

First, we have youth in some places and capital in different places. Unless we build a bridge for capital to flow where young people are [to create jobs and prosperity], not only would we undermine prospects for growth, but we would also undermine global stability.

Two, climate. The sources of emissions – historically and now – are primarily in advanced economies and large emerging market economies. But where is most of the impact? Tragically, in countries that have done nothing to create the problem. We must build a bridge to help address this imbalance.

Three, financial capacity to cope with a fast-changing, more shock prone world. Financial resources are much larger in some places than in others.

And so – our institutions have a huge responsibility to do what is necessary for the world today and the world tomorrow.

Adapting institutions

For the Fund and for the Bank, this translates into the imperative of a change in mindset. We must recognize that – at their core – our mandates are the same but how we implement these mandates should change dramatically.

For the IMF, we have a clear mission: macroeconomic and financial stability, growth, and employment.

But to implement this mission in the world I described – with the imbalances we face – requires us to take a much more comprehensive view. What does that mean in practice?

It means a more comprehensive view of the resilience of people – to ensure they are educated, healthy and have good social protection.

It means a more comprehensive view of the resilience of society – not just in the banking sector – because when society is unfair and unjust the economy cannot deliver the best fruit for all people.

And of course, a more comprehensive view when it comes to the resilience of our planet.

And when we take that more holistic, more comprehensive approach to our mandate – that requires us to examine how we work, what our priorities are, and what instruments we deploy.

Well-resourced reinvigorated multilateralism

Clearly a top priority for both the Bank and the Fund is to mobilize more concessional and grant financing because of the imbalances I have described.

Start with the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT). We have almost reached the resources we need to meet demand.

Yet, demand is higher, interest rates are higher –so we need more subsidy resources to make up the difference between the market rates received by lenders and the below market rates we are committed to offer to our most vulnerable borrowers. This subsidy gap stands at US$1.2 billion.

My appeal at this Summit is to close this gap.

President Banga and I will go to Morocco for the IMF and World Bank Annual Meetings in October. This will be the first time in half a century that the meetings will take place on the African continent.

We will go there to deliver for Africa and that means having a strong International Development Association (IDA) and a strong PRGT.

We have also promised to help re-channel Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). So if countries in strong reserve positions that receive SDRs don't need them, they should lend their SDRs to others – through the Fund or through multilateral development banks.

The target for such rechanneling was set at US$100 billion. And I can announce today that we reached that target.

Now, we must lift our ambition.

On SDR channeling, we started with a request for countries to channel 20 percent of their 2021 allocation. Then we went to 30 percent. And now we are moving to an ask of 40 percent.

Today we have close to US$60 billion in pledges to be channeled through the Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) and through the PRGT.

And - for the Resilience and Sustainability Trust, I'm very proud to announce that we have raised more than US$40 billion – close to our original target. Today, I'm using this meeting to ask that we lift our ambition by an additional US$20 billion -- because we now have proof of concept.

We already have seven countries benefiting and hope for another 10 countries to benefit next year.

For sure, demand for the RST has been very strong. Why? For the first time in our history, we are offering long-term financing – with a 20-year repayment period and a 10-year grace period. And we are providing financing to vulnerable middle-income countries on concessional terms.

In implementing the RST, we are working closely with the World Bank. It is the analytics of the World Bank, such as the Country Climate and Development Reports, that underpin two thirds of our RST programs.

And today we will announce how the RST is working with other institutions, such as the European Investment Bank, the African Development Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank – showing that we deliver on what we pledged to do: we are acting together.

I want to conclude with the following.

We know that average income per capita has increased by several multiples over the past decades.

But, as my professor of statistics used to say: if you put your head in the refrigerator, and your feet in the oven, your temperature would be average – but you would be dead.

Why do I say this? If we don't restart the engine of income convergence, then – for people lower down the income spectrum whose income is lagging – the fact that the average global income is increasing would not make any difference to their lives.

Our institutions are committed to ensure this is not the fate of the world.

Thank you.

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