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BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhuanet) -- The finance ministers of China and
Britain Friday issued a joint statement on global development,calling on the
world to fulfil the commitments they made in Monterrey in 2002 on aid, debt
relief and trade, and set urgent targets to increase their official development
assistance to 0.7 percent of their gross domestic product.
The following is the full text of the joint statement:
Joint Statement By the Finance Ministers of China and the UK On
Global Development 15 April 2005
1. 2005 is a critical year for the international community, which
will see the 60th anniversary of the founding of the UN and the Bretton Woods
Institutions. The year will also witness the Millennium Review Summit at the UN
and the WTO Ministerial meetingin Hong Kong, China, which will assess the
progress of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the Doha Development
Roundrespectively. In 2005 China and the UK hold the Presidencies of the G20 and
G7 respectively.
2. World leaders committed in 2000 to meet the MDGs by 2015. But
progress so far has been too slow and uneven. In advance of the World Bank and
IMF Spring Meetings, which are a key step in makingprogress on this agenda,
China and the UK recognize that meeting the MDGs is vital for sustainable
economic growth and poverty elimination. Progress on meeting the MDGs is
therefore one of the key elements of the G20 and G7's agendas in 2005. We
believe that our joint efforts will be conducive to reaching that goal, and we
call upon the international community to fulfil the commitments they made in
Monterrey in 2002 on aid, debt relief and trade.
AID
3. Constraints on financing for development are a major obstacle
toward meeting the MDGs as scheduled. To meet this challenge, theinternational
community should set urgent targets to meet 0.7 percent ODA.
4. Even with an international commitment to 0.7 percent, there would
be an unacceptable delay in raising the required resources. Innovative financing
mechanisms for development are therefore very important for relieving the
constraint on development financing. China supports the International Financial
Facility (IFF) proposed by the UK. Both China and the UK welcome, and are
committed to exploring, the other proposals related to increasing financing
resources for development.
5. Action is also needed to ensure that international aid is provided
in the most effective way. Donors should target aid on the poorest countries;
harmonization of aid around country-owned poverty strategies; providing aid in a
more predictable, long term way; and delivery of aid in a way which imposes the
minimum burden on developing country systems. All countries should also support
and enhance efforts and initiatives, such as untying aid, to make aid more
effective.
DEBT RELIEF
6. The HIPC initiative is having a positive impact on reducing the
debts for many of the poorest countries. We reaffirm our commitment to a
complete and successful implementation of the initiative in order to further
enhance the debt relief of eligible countries. We welcome the successful
conclusion of IDA14 negotiations.
7. But too many countries still have to choose between debt
repayments and vital investments in future growth and the achievement of the
MDGs. 80 percent of the debt of some low income countries is owed to the
multilateral institutions.
8. Further debt reduction of HIPCs should be an international
priority. We call upon the shareholders of the MDBs to finance their share of
the debts owed by HIPCs and other eligible low income countries. This debt
relief will give countries the confidence in predictable flows of income over
the long term which they need in order to invest in future growth and poverty
reduction.
TRADE
9. China and the UK recognize that it is through trade that
developing countries will drive their economic growth in future. However, there
are many obstacles to trade which urgently need to be removed.
10. We recognize that the top priority for trade is to achieve an
ambitious outcome to the Doha development round which delivers real benefits to
developing countries. China and the UK will work together to achieve this.
11. Developed countries should also encourage knowledge and
technology transfer to developing countries.
12. It will be important to remove barriers to developing country
exports in the developed world, including unfair subsidies and tariffs,
especially in agriculture. It will also be important to simplify and liberalise
rules of origin, so that countries can source the products they need from the
most competitive sources. However, other action is also required. We call on the
international community to invest in the capacity and infrastructure that
developing countries need in order to take advantage of the opportunities for
more open trade.
13. It is also important that developing countries themselves are
able to manage trade liberalization in a way that does not harm the vulnerable.
To ensure this, we call on the international community to ensure that countries
are allowed the flexibility to sequence trade reform within their own
development plans. We further call upon the international community to provide
transitional support to developing countries adjusting to a globalised world.
THE BRETTON WOODS INSTITUTIONS
14. The Bretton Woods Institutions will play a vital role in helping
the international community meet the MDGs. The IMF has a key role to play
through independent surveillance in minimizing potential risks to the global
economy. We believe that the World Bank should fulfil its commitment to global
poverty reduction and long-term economic development. It should strengthen its
role as the "Knowledge Bank", and enhance the surveillance on the implementation
of the Monterrey Consensus. The Bank should develop more effective lending
instruments, simplify its operating procedures, and reduce the cost of doing
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