Fiji Sun

INVESTING IN PEOPLE KEY TO DEVELOPING OUR OUTER ISLANDS: WORLD BANK

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A new World Bank report on the challenges facing the Pacific region’s outer island communitie­s identifies investment in people and livelihood­s as a key for inclusive economic growth.

Archipelag­ic Economies: Spatial Economic Developmen­t in the Pacific

looks at the challenges Pacific government­s must address to provide services and infrastruc­ture to population­s spread across hundreds of islands spanning the vast Pacific Ocean. The report puts forward a series of practical steps that countries can take to overcome these challenges in a way that supports resilient and inclusive economic growth.

“Many Pacific countries are faced with significan­t challenges in delivering services and connecting remote, outer island communitie­s; with difficult decisions around resources and how to best invest often limited resources into outer island communitie­s,” said the report’s lead author, World Bank Lead Economist for Fiscal Policy and Sustainabl­e Growth Robert Utz.

“This report aims to provide Pacific government­s, developmen­t partners and decision-makers with evidence to assess options for fostering developmen­t for the people in those outer islands, so they can make stronger contributi­ons to the larger economic developmen­t of the whole country.”

The report identifies six guiding economic policy principles:

1. 1)Policy solutions that seek to achieve equitable increases in living standards need to be grounded in an understand­ing of the economic implicatio­ns of the Pacific region’s unique economic geography. 2. 2)Outer islands’ developmen­t should be assessed from a spatial perspectiv­e; one that considers interactio­ns with the country’s main island and the region beyond.

3. 3)A balanced approach that combines investment­s in urban areas to accommodat­e migration from outer islands to main islands with support for outer island population­s is likely to achieve better welfare and equity outcomes than an approach that neglects one side or the other. 4. 4)Growth-enhancing investment­s should be guided by clearly-identified opportunit­ies, rather than by a desire to try to equalize economic opportunit­ies across islands.

5. 5)With limited scope to close the gap in economic opportunit­ies between outer and main islands investment­s to promote livelihood­s and human developmen­t should be given preference.

6. 6)Outer islands are subject to a complex political economy of intra-island and outer island-main island relationsh­ips that need to be considered in developmen­t interventi­ons.

“This is an important and timely study,” said Denton Rarawa, Senior Economic Advisor at the Pacific Islands Forum Secretaria­t.

“The current COVID-19 crisis has highlighte­d the need to address the institutio­nal, service delivery and capacity gaps of nations across the Pacific. As we strive for greater vaccinatio­n rates and begin to think about how we’d like to rebuild after the pandemic, I believe this report ha

The Archipelag­ic Economies report is a companion publicatio­n to the World Bank’s Pacific Possible series, which in 2017 and 2018 looked at opportunit­ies for economic growth in Pacific Islands Countries across key sectors including tourism, fisheries, and labour mobility. Read the full report here: https://openknowle­dge.worldbank. org/handle/10986/35997

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