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Maintaining growth in testing times: UNCTAD XII to consider impact of economic trends on development


Press Release
For use of information media - Not an official record
UNCTAD/PRESS/PR/Accra/2008/001/Rev.1
Maintaining growth in testing times: UNCTAD XII to consider impact of economic trends on development

Geneva, Switzerland, 29 February 2008

Twelfth United Nations Conference on Trade and Development to take place in Accra, Ghana, 20-25 April

Heads of state, ministers, economists to discuss better translation of globalization gains into poverty reduction; nurturing and expanding South-South trade; commodities boom; regional integration; foreign investment for development, debt management; technology; growing impact of creative economy; importance of small firms and entrepreneurship for development.

Geneva, 29 February 2008 — The danger that financial turmoil and an economic slowdown in industrialized countries will derail promising economic growth in the developing world is likely to be at the heart of debate when senior government officials, economists, and development experts gather in Accra, Ghana, in April for the twelfth United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.

UNCTAD XII, to be held 20-25 April, has as its principal theme "addressing the opportunities and challenges of globalization for development." Some 4,000 representatives of UNCTAD´s 193 member States - including several Heads of State - and participants from other international bodies, non-governmental organizations, business, and academia are expected.

At the conference, member governments will negotiate and adopt a text assessing the international climate for economic development and defining UNCTAD´s work programme for the next four years. Member countries began the process of preparing the UNCTAD XII text in November, and further intense negotiations are expected in Accra. UNCTAD´s quadrennial ministerial meetingsi started when the organization was created in 1964. "UNCTAD´s mandate is more important than ever in today´s context of deepening interdependence," says Supachai Panitchpakdi, UNCTAD Secretary-General.

The conference comes as global uncertainties threaten the most promising economic growth in the developing world in 30 years. During the past half decade, developing countries have averaged economic growth of 5% or more, and the international landscape has tilted with the emergence of economic heavyweights outside the industrialized west, including China, India, and Brazil. The world economic outlook hinges strongly on whether these nations and the developing countries they increasingly trade with have enough momentum to become less vulnerable to downturns in North America and Western Europe.

A related problem to be scrutinized in Accra is the seeming paradox that despite high growth in Asia, Latin America, and Africa, only limited reductions in poverty have been achieved, especially in the world´s 49 least developed countries (LDCs). Globalization that does not bring broadly higher living standards - especially during a halcyon period of economic growth - has
governments and international economists concerned about what will be necessary to tackle the deep poverty in which hundreds of millions continue to live. It also raises questions about the world’s ability to achieve the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, which include halving extreme poverty by 2015.

The conference´s high-level discussion on 21 April will accordingly be devoted to Africa ("Trade and development for Africa´s prosperity: action and direction"), where most LDCs are located. The session will be chaired by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and moderated by UNCTAD Secretary-General Supachai Panitchpakdi, and will reflect the importance attached to ensuring that African countries benefit more from globalization. Key concerns include an inability among many African nations to create enough jobs, particularly well-paid and productive ones, and a continuing dependency on agriculture and extractive industries.

As recent events in financial markets have shown, countries and economies are more and more interlinked, underlining the need for the kind of global dialogue and debate to be fostered by the conference. Participants will seek to identify policies and strategies that enhance the benefits, and reduce the risks, of globalization for developing countries, all the more necessary given the current economic situation. To this end, in addition to the high-level session, main debate and negotiations, a number of other events will focus on timely themes and trends. These include a series of ministerial roundtables.

The commodities boom and its development importance, for example, will be reviewed at a roundtable on 23 April titled "The changing face of commodities in the 21st Century." Experts will discuss whether burgeoning demand from China and other emerging economies can be expected to keep prices for oil, gas, minerals, metals, and basic agricultural produce at high levels. And they will debate whether income from commodity exports is potentially enough to spur broad development and poverty reduction in the world´s poorer nations. UNCTAD´s price index for non-fuel commodities recently reached its highest level (in current dollars) since 1960, and commodity dependence in Africa and elsewhere remains intensive: Some 85 developing countries rely on commodities for more than half their export earnings, and for 70 of them, more than half of their exports consist of three or fewer commodities.

The dynamic South

The significance of rapidly expanding South-South trade will be discussed at a 23 April roundtable titled "Emergence of a new South and South-South trade as a vehicle for regional and interregional integration for development." South-South merchandise trade jumped from US$577 billion in 1995 to over $2 trillion in 2006. By 2006, such commercial exchanges between developing countries accounted for 17% of world trade and 46% of developing countries´ total merchandise trade.

The type of trade also is significant: manufacturing represented almost half of South-South flows, while for the commodity sector, including fuels, interregional trade among countries of the South has expanded, and developing countries, especially in Asia, have become a vital export market for Africa. Participants in the roundtable are likely to debate whether South-South trade is now so strong and self-reinforcing that it could help sustain global growth in the face of a slowdown in developed countries.

In tandem with trade, South-South foreign direct investment (FDI) has been rising, and transnational corporations (TNCs) based in developing countries have achieved heretofore unseen scale and influence, including through the acquisition of well-established global brands.  The impact this has on the international investment landscape and the best policies that could be applied to build the institutional capacities needed to enhance the development benefits derived from foreign investment will be one of the issues that will be discussed at a 22 April roundtable "Creating an institutional environment conducive to increased foreign investment and sustainable development."

Bringing more countries on board

How poor nations can accomplish greater, more broad-based economic growth is also the topic of a 24 April roundtable on "Harnessing knowledge and technology for development." The debate, based on UNCTAD´s Least Developed Countries Report 2007, will centre on the idea that developing countries not only need to import and master up-to-date technology but also to develop it themselves and use it to create innovative products that can be manufactured efficiently and sold around the world. Meeting participants are likely to discuss the significant "spillover" benefits that can result from cross-border flows of knowledge and to review the potential costs of recent trends in which knowledge is increasingly privatized and commercialized.

A roundtable on "Globalization, development and poverty reduction: their social and gender dimensions" (22 April) will consider how increased trade and economic growth affect such matters as income equality and women´s roles in society and in national economies. Wide gaps in income have persisted between and within countries even as developing country exports have accelerated in recent years. Participants in the roundtable can be expected to discuss how globalization´s benefits can be spread more evenly.

The risk of new debt crises will be weighed at a roundtable on "Debt management solutions supporting trade and development" (24 April). Although external debt in the developing world has declined modestly in recent years - driven in part by climbing trade and commodity prices and international debt-relief programmes - numerous countries still have substantial debt burdens and may be vulnerable to shifts in the global economic picture.

A roundtable on "Developing productive capacities in least developed countries" (24 April) will focus on the continuing difficulties of LDCs in shifting their economies away from dependence on exports of primary commodities - such as crude oil, and metal ores - and simple manufactures to more sophisticated and varied products that promise the creation of greater numbers of jobs at higher rates of pay. Economies based on higher "value added" also are historically less vulnerable to shocks and downturns.

And two roundtables on 25 April will tackle the matter of "Strengthening UNCTAD: enhancing its development role and its impact and institutional effectiveness."

Forums on investment, civil society

Other events in conjunction with the conference include a World Investment Forum to be staged from 18-21 April and a Civil Society Forum from 17-25 April.

The World Investment Forum will feature government officials, investors, and investment promotion agencies from 193 countries and focus on "the investment-led globalization process and its trends and prospects." The world´s poorest nations have sought - and have succeeded in attracting - greater FDI, and such private investment can provide jobs, infusions of new technology and the expansion of exports. Given that these do not always result automatically, the forum will place particular emphasis on how companies, countries and regions can maximize the opportunities generated by the investment process. The forum will have interactive panel sessions as well as an awards ceremony to honour three investment promotion agencies for excellence.

There will also be a high-level event called "The global leaders investment debate." This will provide a unique opportunity for heads of state and government and corporate leaders to explore the emerging international investment landscape.

The civil society gathering will attract numerous non-governmental organizations, business representatives, members of the academic community, and others to discuss ways to "enhance the impact and effectiveness of trade and development efforts." The forum will produce a "position document" that will be presented on 21 April to the opening plenary of the UNCTAD XII.

Creative industries and women in business

The creative industries - cultural and artistic undertakings such as folk art, festivals, books, paintings, music, and film - are a promising field of economic growth for developing nations and will be featured on 20 April with the launching of the first UN multi-agency report on the topic. Creative Economy Report 2007: the Challenge of Assessing the Creative Economy- Towards Informed Policymaking is based on a partnership between UNCTAD and the United Nations Development Programme, with contributions from the United Nations Educational Scientific, and Cultural Organization, the World Intellectual Property Organization, and the International Trade Centre. Creative-industry exports from developing countries rose from US$55.9 billion in 1996 to $136.2 billion in 2005.

Throughout the week of UNCTAD XII, a "Creative Africa" initiative will showcase African contemporary art, fashion, music and dance. Among the activitiesii planned are fashion shows by Cameroon´s Anggy Haif, Niger´s Alphadi and Ghana´s Kofi Ansah as well as concerts by Nigeria´s Femi Kuti, Senegal´s Youssou N´Dour and Ghana´s Kojo Antwi and performances by the Ghana Dance Ensemble and Afro-oriental dancer Dina Talaat. A contemporary art exhibit organized with Dak´Art Biennal will feature works by Ludovic Fadairo (Benin), Joel Mpah-Dooh (Cameroon), Bill Kouelany (Congo), Freddy Tsimba (Democratic Republic of the Congo), Jacques Samir Stenka (Côte d´Ivoire), Brahim El-Anatsui (Ghana), Abdoulaye Konaté (Mali), Bruce Onobrakpeya (Nigeria), Souleymane Keita (Senegal) and Sokey Edorh (Togo).

The evening of 21 April, UNCTAD XII will highlight the importance of entrepreneurship in developing countries with the first Women in Business Awards. An independent panel of experts will choose the winners from among 10 nominees, all owners of firms that have benefited from the business development services of UNCTAD´s 27 Empretec Centres around the world. Empretec, launched in 1988, promotes entrepreneurship by providing practical and behavioural advice on starting and expanding small- and medium-sized enterprises. Research has shown that healthy national economic growth depends on a thriving population of small firms. They are prime incubators for new products and the principal source of domestic employment.

Journalists are welcome at UNCTAD XII and may register for the conference by completing the forms available online at www.unctadxii.org/mediaaccreditation.