FORUM: Economic and Social Council QUESTION OF: Addressing debt problems of developing countries MAIN-SUBMITTED BY: The Russian Federation

Similar documents
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the Second Committee (A/62/417/Add.3)]

Draft UN resolution on external debt sustainability and development

Table of Recommendations

External debt is still a major obstacle to development so that debt relief must be a priority.

The Paris Club and International Debt Relief

The Zambian Economy in Perspective: The Impact of the IMF Policies

May 8, 2006 INTRODUCTION

Chapter 18: Development and Globalization Section 2

Bretton Woods Intentional Interdependence Bretton Woods New Hampshire. I.M.F.

The Proposed UNPAN Classified Keywords 1 August 2001

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY

DEBT SUSTAINABILITY ANALYSIS CASE OF LAO P.D.R. (2005 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATION)

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the Second Committee (A/66/438/Add.3)]

Export Group Meeting on the Contribution and Effective Use of External Resources for Development, in Particular for Productive Capacity Building

International Monetary and Financial Committee

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

AS PREPARED FOR DELIVERY. Towards a More Secure Recovery Shared by All By Christine Lagarde, IMF Managing Director

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the Second Committee (A/67/435/Add.3)]

TRADE, FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT DID YOU KNOW THAT...?

AUTHOR ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Population living on less than $1 a day

Ten key messages of the Latin American and Caribbean regional consultation on Financing for Development

HIPC HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES INITIATIVE MDRI MULTILATERAL DEBT RELIEF INITIATIVE

Debt policy update. January 2011

MDRI HIPC. heavily indebted poor countries initiative. To provide additional support to HIPCs to reach the MDGs.

THE RUSSIAN PRESIDENCY IN G20: PRIORITIES AND GENERAL APPROACHES

Why Invest in Africa. Senzo Hlangu. 7 June 2011

MDRI HIPC MULTILATERAL DEBT RELIEF INITIATIVE HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES INITIATIVE GOAL GOAL

Dusan Zivkovic, UNCTAD. Ad Hoc Committee on Sovereign Debt Restructuring Processes 2 nd Working Session United Nations General Assembly 29 April 2015

Nicolas Dujovne, Treasury Minister of Argentina Federico Sturzenegger, Central Bank Governor of Argentina

Recovery with a Human Face Isabel Ortiz, Associate Director Policy and Practice UNICEF New York, 18 February 2010

Save the Children s Input to the Zero Draft of the Outcome of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development

Debt for Education Swaps

Third International Conference on Financing for Development

Debt Burden and Fiscal Sustainability in the Caribbean Region IMF- Presentation

Official Journal of the European Union. (Legislative acts) DECISIONS

Response to UNFCCC Secretariat request for proposals on: Information on strategies and approaches for mobilizing scaled-up climate finance (COP)

SUMMARY OF THE DOCTORAL THESIS PUBLIC DEBT AND SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS

Living Standards. Why can t I have what he s got?

Bretton Woods Intentional Interdependence. Bretton Woods New Hampshire. I.M.F.

Balance of Payments, Debt, Financial Crises, and Stabilization Policies

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Experiences Managing Public Debt in Crisis: The Case of Guyana

2018 ECOSOC Forum on FfD Zero Draft

STATEMENT BY THE HEAD OF THE ITALIAN DELEGATION AT UNCTAD XII (Accra, Ghana APRIL 2008)

Chapter 10 GOVERNMENT SPENDING

Under Secretary Robert D. Hormats World Investment Forum, Doha, Qatar, April 20 23, 2012

Recent Developments at the Inter-American Development Bank. J. James Spinner General Counsel Inter-American Development Bank

Contents Conceptual Framework of Sovereign Debt Issues: Applicant s Arguments Respondent s Arguments

DOMESTIC RESOURCE MOBILIZATION AND INVESTMENT IN AFRICA

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Yemen Socio-Economic Update

The International Finance Facility for Education

EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING ON GREECE FIRST AND SECOND REVIEWS UNDER THE EFF JANUARY 16, 2013 STATEMENT BY MR. THANOS CATSAMBAS

IDA13. IDA, Grants and the Structure of Official Development Assistance

IS SOVEREIGN DEBT AN ISSUE FOR SUBSAHARAN AFRICA? By Fanwell Kenala Bokosi, PhD. Introduction

Issues paper: Proposed Methodology for the Assessment of the BPoA. Draft July Susanna Wolf

Message from the Prime Minister of Republic of Turkey

International Monetary and Financial Committee

The Balance of Payments II Capital Account

REFORM OF THE BRETTON WOODS INSTITUTIONS

Evaluation of the Law on Public Debt Management of Vietnam and some Policy Implications

ANALYSIS OF UGANDA S GROWING FISCAL DEFICIT AND DOMESTIC DEBT ACCUMULATION. Abstract

THE IMF: INSTRUMENTS AND STRATEGIES. Lecture 5 LIUC 2009 ORIGINS OF THE IMF

The Balance of Payments II Capital Account

The Case of Poland. Edilberto L. Segura. The Early Economic Reform Program. August 2002

PRESENTATION TO CABRI. Is there a role for Debt Managers in Developing Local-Currency Debt Markets. By Phakamani Hadebe

Multilateral Development Banks

The international financial crisis

TAX INCENTIVES OFFERED BY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: ATTRACTING FOREIGN INVESTMENT OR CREATING DISASTER

BALANCING THE FEDERAL BUDGET TO ENSURE FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

Compliance Report Okinawa 2000 Development. Commitments 1. Debt

EDICT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF BELARUS. December 31, 2017 No. 470 Minsk

HANDOUT # 1 SAMPLE NO CELL-PHONE POLICY RESOLUTION

International Monetary and Financial Committee

A Study of World Role and the World Bank s Plan of Action in India

2018 ECOSOC Forum on FfD Draft Rev.1, 29 March 2018

The IMF & MCC requirements to Ghana

Assistance 3 Total Arab Export (1)

OFFICE OF THE COORDINATING MINISTER FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA

Communiqué. Meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, 23 April 2010

Revised outline v February Inaugural Inter-agency Task Force (IATF) Report on Financing for Development Outline

Revised Schedule of IDA'S HIPC Debt Relief to Guinea I. INTRODUCTION

Annex Agreed documents The following documents agreed by the G20 support our Communique: G20 Blueprint on Innovative Growth G Innovation

Strengthening Debt Management- Challenge Ahead. The Gambian Experience. Mod K. Ceessay Republic of The Gambia. DMF Stakeholders Forum 2011.

Appendix Explanatory Notes and Data Sources

The DMFAS Programme: An Overview

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND WORLD BANK GROUP

CONVERGENCE BETWEEN KAZAKHSTAN S FINANCIAL SYSTEMAND INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS: OVERCOMING DIFFICULTIES. Natalya Uvarova 1

Policy Options for Dealing with the Impact of the Financial Crisis on the External Debt of Developing Countries

Chapter 1. Globalization and the Multinational Corporation Cambridge University Press 1-1

DEVELOPMENTAL PRIORITIES OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA

The Central Bank of Egypt

DEBT AND DEVELOPMENT: THE NEXT 15 YEARS

Joint Bank-Fund Library. Collection Development Policy

The Role of the Public and Private Sector in Transport Infrastructure

Policy Brief. Does Turkey Need a New Standby Agreement? March 2008, No.9. Erdal T. KARAGÖL 1. Standby Agreements in Turkey

International Finance Resource Mobilization

REFORMING PENSION SYSTEMS: THE OECD EXPERIENCE

Analyzing Bangladesh s Debt Sustainability Using SimSIP Debt

Transcription:

FORUM: Economic and Social Council QUESTION OF: Addressing debt problems of developing countries MAIN-SUBMITTED BY: The Russian Federation THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL, Noting with deep concern that the international debt of developing countries has grown dramatically since the 1980s, with an increasing amount of nations struggling with unsustainable debt that causes economic recession and hinders development, Affirming the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank in 1996, which provides low interest loans and debt relief to an eligible group of 37 developing countries experiencing high levels of debt and poverty, Conscious of the fact that the lack of monitorization of developmental loans on a global scale has caused ineffective expenditures, with approximately 20% wasted on the military, failed infrastructure projects and government corruption, Alarmed by the fact that a study from the World Bank in 2010 found the debt of developing countries to be totaled at approximately $4 trillion, surmounting to an average of 21% of the Gross National Income (GNI) of these countries and reaching as high as 43% in Europe and Central Asia s developing nations, 1. Recommends More Economically Developed Countries (MEDCs) and international institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Funds to increase facilitation of external debt and relief in developing countries to ensure the effective expenditure of development assistance through ways such as but not limited to: a. implementing the Digital Accountability and Transparency Act (DATA) in developing country governments with the objective of: i. making expenditures accessible and transparent by establishing a system of financial data sharing online and to other official organizations ii. having records and receipts listed and archived so that unaccounted expenditure can be controlled; b. curbing government corruption of external loans through the construction of stricter regulations through ways, such as but not limited to: i. promoting transparency of government expenditures and freedom of press, ii. reforming legal framework and policies to end government impunity

iii. performing mandatory audits on governmental loan expenditures by a neutral third party (UN branch) iv. collaboration between governments and non-profit non-governmental organizations (NGOs) such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or the World Bank in order to track external debt and relief expenditures; c. the monitorization and management of social and economic progress and funds provided by the IMF, the World Bank, and other international organizations for the HIPC on the developing nations by the UN, specifically on aspects of education, infrastructure, health, and various social and public services; 2. Expresses its hope for MEDCs and international organizations to continue and increase debt relief initiatives/developmental assistance to LEDC in order to propagate social development and debt sustainability through means, such as but not limited to: a. a wider range of qualification conditions for the HIPCs initiative, not only considering debt traps and GDP but other factors in the consideration of picking nations who are eligible for assistance by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank such as but not limited to: i. consideration of the economic history and background of the nation ii. consideration of political and social implication domestically and internationally of such debt situations iii. regularly reassessing the HIPCs threshold requirements in order to be certain any nation in need of such aid are considered, and that no effort is wasted on countries not in need benefitting from the HIPC Initiative; b. reiterating the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) to supplement the HIPC initiative with the objectives of: i. improving living standards in in-debt third world countries through poverty reduction strategies, macroeconomic policies and more ii. providing more debt relief to HIPCs to reach economic sustainability iii. aiding recovering developing nations to reach debt full self-sustainability; c. encouraging the IMF and World Bank to negotiate further on interest rates and loan rescheduling and restructuring with countries that have the risk of loan default through ways not limited to: i. the extension of payment deadlines for struggling countries ii. the increase in intervals of payment iii. the reduction of payment amounts;

3. Further recommends LEDCs to take action regarding sustainable economic and social development in order to increase their ability to repay debts and decrease loan default risk through ways such as but not limited to: a. suggesting MEDCs help improve and increase education resources such as but not limited to facilities and books in order to educate the young citizens of LEDCs through means such as but not limited to: i. collaboration through NGOs that hold educational resource fundraisers and redistribute them to LEDCs ii. incentivize collaboration between nations through multilateral trade agreements iii. providing education in the STEM fields to further set up opportunities in technological and medical development; b. collaboration between the member states to help LEDCs to construct Social Overhead Capital (SOC) such as but not limited to: i. highways ii. railways iii. power plants; 4. Advises HIPCs and other developing nations to promote the constructive use of debt/equity swaps in order to facilitate economic growth and reverse capital flight through means such as but not limited to: a. surveying and applying the success of Chile in 1987 according to circumstances of developing countries through: i. examination of the discrepancies between the market value of native and international currencies ii. analyzation of the financial and investment climate of the country by government financiers and third parties; b. attracting foreign investment and capital investment through the: i. financial regulation reforms that incentivize foreign investment ii. decrease of state interference through taxation, regulation and subsidies in capital markets; 5. Encourages developing nations to reduce the size of the public sector in its economy and privatize state-owned enterprises to stimulate economic growth and decrease government expenditures through means such as but not limited to: a. creating and expanding capital markets by: i. reforming economic policies to incentivize foreign investment ii. popularizing capitalism in developing countries by making wider sharing of ownership available to the public

iii. promoting financial literacy and understanding of the benefits of capitalism to the public; b. ensuring economic liberalization through ways such as but limited to: i. lessening the government economic restrictions and regulations ii. lowering taxes for business iii. decreasing government intervention with supply and demand to create unrestricted competition; c. preserving property rights of private business by: i. strengthening property laws that protect private sectors ii. government enforcement of property right laws; 6. Emphasizes the need for ameliorated global monitoring and accountability mechanisms to ensure the compliance of external debt principles by in debt developing countries through means such as but not limited to: a. creation of an international monitoring system under the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) with the duties of: i. creating cross-country analysis to compare the debt expenditures performances of countries ii. analyzing the best developmental practices and sharing this with other countries iii. introducing a system of sustainable lending and borrowing based on the ability of a country to repay loans; b. introducing self-monitoring of debt expenditures in developing countries through ways such as but not limited to: i. the conduction of annual debt audits by chosen third parties ii. monitoring of debt expenditures by local and national officials.