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UN Agrees On Action Plan To Blunt Economic Downturn Impact

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  • UN Agrees On Action Plan To Blunt Economic Downturn Impact

    UN AGREES ON ACTION PLAN TO BLUNT ECONOMIC DOWNTURN IMPACT

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    27.06.2009 13:54 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ With the world facing the worst financial
    crisis since the Great Depression, Government leaders and senior
    ministers meeting at United Nations Headquarters in New York agreed
    on a sweeping action plan to help blunt the impact of the economic
    downturn, especially for developing counties, but "in the interest
    of all nations [...] to achieve more inclusive, equitable, balanced,
    development-oriented and sustainable economic development to help
    overcome poverty and inequality", the UN news center reported.

    "We are all in this crisis together. While each country has primary
    responsibility for its own economic and social development, we
    will continue to work in solidarity on a vigorous, coordinated and
    comprehensive global response to the crisis, in accordance with our
    respective abilities and responsibilities", the political leaders
    pledge in the outcome of the Conference on the World Financial and
    Economic Crisis and Its Impact on Development, which was convened by
    the General Assembly President, Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann.

    The nearly 60-paragraph text (document A/CONF.214/3), which will be
    forwarded to the Assembly for adoption during its current session,
    expresses world leaders' belief that the crisis, "which began in the
    world's major financial centers, has spread throughout the global
    economy [and is] negatively affecting all countries, particularly
    developing countries, threatening the livelihoods [and] development
    opportunities of millions of people".

    On the way forward, the leaders pledged to combine their short-term
    responses to meet the immediate impact of the financial and economic
    crisis, particularly on the most vulnerable countries, with medium-
    and long-term responses that necessarily involve the pursuit of
    development and the review of the global economic system. In that
    context, they proposed a course of action that included, among others,
    strengthening the capacity, effectiveness and efficiency of the United
    Nations and its development system. They also request the Economic
    and Social Council to coordinate system-wide follow-up to the outcome
    document's recommendations, and consider setting up an ad hoc panel
    of experts on the crisis and its impact on development.

    The wide-ranging text stresses that developing countries did not
    cause the crisis, but were nevertheless being affected by it, and the
    leaders said their endeavors must be guided by the need to address the
    human costs: an increase in the already unacceptable number of poor
    and vulnerable, particularly women and children, who suffer and die
    of hunger, malnutrition and preventable or curable disease; a rise in
    unemployment; the reduction in access to education and health services;
    and the current inadequacy of social protection in many countries.

    The leaders were particularly concerned about the impact on countries
    in special situations, including least developed countries, small
    island developing States and landlocked developing countries, and
    on African countries and countries emerging from conflict. They
    were equally concerned about the specific development challenges of
    middle-income countries and low-income countries with vulnerable and
    poor populations.

    They agreed that their collective responses to the crisis must,
    therefore, be made "with sensitivity to the specific needs of these
    [developing countries]", which included, among others: trade and market
    access; access to adequate financing and concessionary financing; debt
    sustainability; trade facilitation measures; the Millennium Development
    Goals; and previously agreed development commitments. Therefore, an
    adequate share of any additional resources -- both short-term liquidity
    and long-term development financing - will need to be made available
    to developing countries, especially the least developed countries.

    "Going forward, our response must focus on creating jobs, increasing
    prosperity, strengthening access to health and education, correcting
    imbalances, designing and implementing environmentally and socially
    sustainable development paths and having a strong gender perspective",
    the document says, adding that the collective response must also
    strengthen the foundation for a fair, inclusive and sustainable
    globalization supported by renewed multilateralism. "We are confident
    that we will emerge from this crisis stronger and more vigorous and
    more united."

    Expressing their commitment to restoring confidence and economic
    growth and creating full and productive employment and decent work
    for all, the leaders also pledge to, among other things, make national
    stimulus packages work for all, help contain the effects of the crisis
    and improve future global resilience, and improve regulation and
    monitoring mechanisms. "We stress the urgent need for further reform
    of the governance of the Bretton Woods institutions, on the basis of
    a fair and equitable representation of developing countries, in order
    to increase the credibility and accountability of these institutions."

    Citing a consensus on the need to modernize the global financial
    institutions, they said such reforms should enhance the perspective,
    voice and participation of developing countries, including the
    poorest. They specifically called for inclusive consultations
    on further reforms to improve the responsiveness of the World
    Bank. Looking forward to accelerated progress to increase the
    credibility and accountability of the International Monetary Fund
    (IMF), "we strongly support completion of the next quota review,
    which [...] is expected to result in an increase in the quota shares
    of dynamic economies, particularly in the share of emerging market
    and developing countries as a whole, to be completed no later than
    January 2011".
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