The CARICOM Secretary General (SG) says that continued access to multilateral and bilateral concessional financing, notwithstanding the classification of CARICOM Member States as middle income states, is critical to the sustainable development agenda.
Ambassador Irwin LaRocque raised this concern at the Forum on Small States held under the theme “Opportunities and Challenges for Small States to finance Sustainable Development in the post 2015 Development Landscape”. The Small States Forum that was recently held in Peru
Attendees included Chairman of the Small States Forum and Minister of Finance, Trade and the Blue Economy, Seychelles, H.E. Jean Paul Adam, Secretary General of the United Nations Mr. Ban Ki Moon, President of the World Bank Group Jim Yong Kim, as well as United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Administrator, Helen Clark.
The CARICOM SG expressed the view that the criteria for concessional financing must not be based solely on GDP per capita, and must be changed to include the economic and environmental vulnerability of SIDS. The Secretary General also addressed this matter during the International Conference on Financing for Development that was held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia last July. He also met with the Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Helen Clark in New York recently where there was also significant discussion in relation to the issue.
The forum addressed matters such as financing sustainable development for Small Island Developing States (SIDS), considered the impact of the current global economic situation and discussed prospects for the future. In a summary released by the Chairman of the Forum it was noted that "the economic performance of our countries in the recent past is a reflection of the more limited availability of policy tools and resources and also the challenge that small states face in diversifying economic structures and re-orienting economic activities in new markets and sectors."
In addressing the issue of concessional financing for SIDS the Chairman said it was important to examine important, "augmented donor support to help our countries build resilience, address inherent vulnerabilities, and break the low growth, high debt, limited fiscal space spiral, which will continue to have important and long-lasting impacts on our development prospects." He said small states were grateful for the considerable financial support that the World Bank and other partners have provided in recent years, and look forward to renewed targeted support. He called for scaled-up global assistance to build resilience and ensure that there are no impediments to the Green Climate Fund financing reaching small island states.
The Chairman noted that the forum benefited from an extensive exchange of views on the recent conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa and the upcoming Twenty-first Session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP21/CMP11) in Paris. He said the need for stronger fiscal positions to enable faster restoration of policy space was emphasized.
The World Bank has lauded the Forum for providing an opportunity for participants to discuss the implications for small states of the emerging development architecture just after the Addis Ababa conference on Financing for Development and ahead of COP21. COP21 will be a crucial conference, as it needs to achieve a new international agreement on the climate, applicable to all countries, with the aim of keeping global warming below 2°C.
The Small States Forum provided an opportunity for participants to share views and perspectives on how the World Bank, and other bilateral and multilateral organizations can help small states leverage and make effective use of various financing streams to help accelerate progress towards the SDGs while building resilience against and mitigating the impact of natural disasters and climate change.
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