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ROME, Feb. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- China's Vice Finance Minister Li Yong said here Wednesday
that efforts should be made to work out better strategies in reducing
poverty around the world.
Addressing the 28th session of the International Fund for Agriculture Development
(IFAD) meeting, Li, who heads the Chinese delegation, said the international
community should work together to find a more coordinated global strategy
of poverty reduction, a fairer and more efficient aid mechanism for
development and a wider and more significant anti-poverty strategic partnership
in order to achieve the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Developing countries as a whole was put into a disadvantaged position when
faced with the challenges of economic globalization,he said, adding that these
countries have the common problems of development fund shortage, heavy debt
burden, worsening trade conditions and backward technologies.
Industrialized countries should give more consideration to the interests of the developing
countries and adopt favorable policies in opening market, increasing
aid, transferring technologies and reducing debt to create a better environment
for them to a chieve asustained and stable development, he said.
Developing countries, Li said, should take a more active part in international
cooperation and participate in a constructive way in the process of
economic globalization.
They should also make efforts to increase the capacity of self-development
and attach greater importance to institutional and technological renovation in
order to have a better share in the fruits of economic globalization and
sci-tech progress, he added.
Meanwhile, international development organizations, including the IFAD, should give
a better play to their respective advantages and strengthen cooperation
and coordination among one another to promote resource shift and spread
scientific development concepts, he said.
The IFAD is a specialized UN agency founded in 1977 to combat hunger,
poverty and famine in developing countries, especially in rural areas.
Lennart Bage, a Swede, was re-elected as president of the organization during
the present session and will serve for another four years until April
2009.
Bage had worked in the Swedish Foreign Ministry for many years. He was
elected the fourth president of the IFAD in February 2001, the first from an
industrialized nation. Enditem |