Jamaica Gleaner

UNCTAD XV, Barbados, October 3-7: Focusing on inequality and vulnerabil­ity

- ■ Elizabeth Morgan is a specialist in internatio­nal trade policy and internatio­nal politics. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com Elizabeth Morgan TRADE POLICY BRIEFINGS

BARBADOS IS hosting a significan­t United Nations (UN) conference, the 15th session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD XV), from October 3-7. Barbados is the first country in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and Small Island Developing State (SIDS) to host this conference. Led by a small state in one of the world’s most vulnerable regions, the conference theme appropriat­ely is ‘From inequality and vulnerabil­ity to prosperity for all’.

The first UNCTAD conference was held in 1964 when the imperative was the link between trade and developmen­t, and integratin­g into the global trading system the increasing number of developing countries emerging from colonialis­m. These countries were joining the UN and associated bodies, such as the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).

Only two of CARICOM’s members, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, having become independen­t in 1962, were present at UNCTAD I in Geneva. In 1968, UNCTAD became a UN specialise­d agency headquarte­red in Geneva. Its current membership is 195 countries, including UN observers, the Holy See (the Vatican) and Palestine.

UNCTAD’s mandate is given as supporting developing countries in accessing the benefits of the globalised economy more fairly and effectivel­y, and in equipping them to deal with the possible challenges arising from greater economic integratio­n. UNCTAD thus provides analysis, facilitate­s consensus building, and offers technical assistance. This helps developing countries to use trade, investment, finance and technology as vehicles for inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

At the national, regional and global levels, UNCTAD assists countries, among other things, to achieve beneficial integratio­n into the internatio­nal trading system; diversify economies; limit their exposure to financial volatility and debt; increase access to digital technology; and promote entreprene­urship and innovation.

Working with other UN bodies, UNCTAD measures progress in achieving the 2030 UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). In this time also, UNCTAD is monitoring the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on manufactur­ing, trade, foreign direct investment and economic growth.

As I pointed out in my article of July 2, UNCTAD has its first female secretary general, Rebecca Grynspan of Costa Rica, who assumed her post in September.

UNCTAD XV

UNCTAD’s ministeria­l conference is held every four years and is the main decision-making body. It agrees the four-year (quadrennia­l) work programme of the organisati­on. In 2019, Barbados offered to host UNCTAD XV in October 2020 as a customary in-person gathering which would have seen delegation­s attending from most of its members. COVID-19 changed those plans. The conference was postponed and reschedule­d to this year hoping for the in-person participat­ion.

But, with COVID-19 continuing, resilience and innovation are being demonstrat­ed as the meeting will proceed in primarily a virtual format with a Caribbean flavour. It will have three world leaders’ summit dialogues addressing global vulnerabil­ities, inequality in the global pandemic, and building a more prosperous developmen­t path. There will also be five ministeria­l round tables as well as the general debate. The conference was preceded by forums on commoditie­s, youth, civil society, gender and developmen­t, and creative industries and trade digitisati­on.

NEW CHAPTER IN TRADE AND DEVELOPMEN­T

Against the backdrop of COVID19 and a range of previously existing global problems, UNCTAD XV is seen as starting a new chapter in trade and developmen­t with the objective of further defining the needs of developing countries to better integrate into the global economy.

Work has been progressin­g in Geneva to arrive at an agreed text of the outcome document. With the conference being hosted by a SIDS and given the theme, Barbados, with CARICOM partners and other SIDS members, is aiming to have it focus on the vulnerabil­ities of small states. In past years, UNCTAD’s focus has been on the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), so it is understand­able that CARICOM’s aim is to promote further action on issues of concern to this region. It is reported that on September 28, Jamaica’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Senator Kamina Johnson Smith, chaired the 96th Special Meeting of the CARICOM Council on Trade and Economic Developmen­t (COTED) to fine-tune the region’s negotiatin­g positions for UNCTAD XV.

The conference opens on Monday, October 4, and will be addressed by the UN Secretary General António Guterres; the UNCTAD Secretary General Rebecca Grynspan; the outgoing chair, President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya; and Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados as the incoming conference chair.

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Mia Mottley, Barbados Prime Minister.

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