Ministers of the world’s 48 least developed countries
(LDCs), meeting here in advance of the UNCTAD XIII quadrennial conference,
adopted a declaration calling for strengthening of the organisation and for
bolstering its research, technical-cooperation, and consensus-building work.
The document also reaffirmed LDCs’ support for the concept –
long advocated by UNCTAD – of the ‘developmental State’.
The declaration, noting that LDCs currently account for only
one per cent of international trade and that they attract foreign investment
mostly to their extractive industries — which tend to create few jobs and tend
not to lead to broader domestic economic development — said that “efforts to
build the developmental State” are the “key to drive economic growth.”
“We underline the importance of the balanced role of the
State and market considerations, where the State designs policies and
institutions with a view to achieving sustainable and inclusive economic growth
as well as creates an appropriate enabling stable, transparent, and rules-based
economic environment for the effective functioning of markets,” the declaration
reads.
The document goes on to urge redoubled efforts by “trading
and development partners, including developing countries that are in a position
to do so” to support the LDCs in their efforts to expand, diversify, and
fortify their economies and in their efforts to meet the United Nations
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The MDGs include such targets are
halving extreme poverty by 2015.
The declaration requests that such assistance “should go
beyond official development assistance (ODA) to include, in a holistic manner,
transfer of technology and know-how as well as building technological
capacities and innovation in our countries.” It also urges industrialised
countries to meet internationally established targets for official development
assistance.
The concept of the developmental State goes against much
international economic orthodoxy of the past few decades. The prevailing
approach has called for governments to back off, contending that free markets
then are liberated to spur economic growth directly. Several UNCTAD
reports in recent years have charged that this approach, often called
neoliberal economics, has not worked. In recent UNCTAD reports, including
the Least Developed Countries Report
2011, the organization has advocated that the governments of poor
countries take steps to encourage economic growth that will be stable,
long-lasting, and likely to expand employment.
The LDC Ministerial Declaration also echoes UNCTAD’s stress
on expanding LDCs’ productive capacities – that is, the abilities of their
economies to produce broader varieties of goods, and goods of greater
sophistication. UNCTAD has said in recent years that building productive
capacity creates more and better paying jobs and leaves impoverished nations
less vulnerable to historically volatile international prices for commodities
such as raw natural resources and basic agricultural goods.
UNCTAD XIII, which is focused on the theme of
“development-centred globalization” begins on April 21 and continues through
April 26.
The LDC declaration further calls on donor countries to
“support the commodity sectors of our countries, including through commodity
diversification and value addition,” to enable LDCs “greater participation in
global value chains on an equitable basis as a way to promote sustainable
market-driven growth.”
And the document requests that something be done to “ease
the burden of demanding quality and delivery standards” for LDC exports seeking
to enter developed-country markets.” As trade barriers have fallen in
recent years, LDCs have expressed concern that rich nations have been setting
the bar for entry higher through health and quality standards LDC producers
often cannot meet.
Among requests the declaration makes of UNCTAD are that the
organization “undertake studies to help the LDCs better understand and address
the factors that may be holding back their efforts to achieve the MDGs;” that
it “assess the development effectiveness of aid;” and that it build on recent
work to “advance the conceptual and analytical framework on the need for
building productive capacities in LDCs.”
No comments:
Post a Comment