The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Find ways to better lives in developing world

- HIROSHI WATANABE Special to The Yomiuri Shimbun

People in emerging and developing countries certainly have a desire to attain the standard of living enjoyed by developed countries. Nobody should dismiss their desire. In reality, it is not feasible for them to realize their desire in any short space of time. Nor is it easy to initiate and transfer nancial and technical assistance for that purpose. Nonetheles­s, if emerging and developing countries, also known as recipient countries, were told by developed ones to give up on their aspiration­s for better lives a er reaching a certain point, almost none of them would likely give a nod of assent.

e internatio­nal community has been discussing for years how to extend

nancial resources, technical assistance and know-how to those countries so that they will be able to catch up with developed ones regarding standards of living. Such assistance, of course, is absolutely contingent upon recipient countries’ endeavors to proceed toward such a goal in a sincere and e cient manner.

Motives behind cooperatio­n solutions provided by developed countries vary. Nonetheles­s, following the end of World War II, countries shared a view that the extreme inequality that existed at the time should not be le unattended. To embody internatio­nal cooperatio­n, developed countries began o ering economic developmen­t assistance to developing ones through multilater­al organizati­ons or nancial assistance on a bilateral basis.

In 1945, the United States boasted overwhelmi­ng economic strength coupled with abundant capabiliti­es to give

nancial support to countries in need. However, its power subsequent­ly started to decline gradually. en, to complement the U.S. e orts, Japan and then West Germany, both having completed postwar reconstruc­tion, began increasing their nancial assistance to developing countries. Indeed, Japan temporaril­y emerged as the world’s largest provider of economic assistance.

Since the closing years of the 20th century, China has changed itself from a recipient of nancial assistance to a donor largely for political reasons, launching a considerab­le array of outbound nancial support initiative­s.

As such, there was a recent time when many countries stepped up nancial assistance e orts to raise the overall amount of money to help recipient countries shape their economic developmen­t programs.

IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE

However, the circumstan­ces surroundin­g developmen­t nance have changed since e orts to prevent global warming surfaced as a decisively important challenge for mankind.

With the world’s focus increasing­ly shi ing to the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions all over Earth, the method of promoting recipient countries’ economic developmen­t through

nancial assistance no longer works in

its traditiona­l form.

Production activities entail carbon dioxide emissions. Assuming that countries comply with the internatio­nal agreement on climate change even while still aiming to accomplish a certain level of economic developmen­t, they will have to secure “quality investment” that will be highly costly, owing to the inclusion of costs for environmen­tal measures. is means that if developed countries’ nancial support initiative­s fail to meet the abovementi­oned assistance criteria, recipient countries will have to inevitably scale down their economic developmen­t goals, deferring their target years for completing relevant projects.

e focal point of discussion from now on is how developed countries and emerging and developing ones should share responsibi­lities and roles in striking a balance between environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and economic developmen­t.

e accumulate­d amount of carbon dioxide emitted thus far by all countries is a burden on Earth’s environmen­t. When retrospect­ively aggregatin­g such emissions on a country-by-country basis, the combined amount for the developed world exceeds that for the developing world. Against this background, the latter group insists that it is natural for developed countries to take much greater responsibi­lity for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Should the developed world be indi erent to this point, the issue of global warming would get no closer to a solution with the same arguments being repeated over and over again.

It is understand­able that people in emerging and developing countries desire to attain the standard of living enjoyed by developed ones. Yet, it is unlikely that the incomes of all people living on Earth will be equalized anytime soon. Income equalizati­on should rst be pursued by certain individual countries, with other countries gradually accepting it as a norm.

Once the European Union chooses to implement scal uni cation on top of monetary and currency integratio­n, it will likely prioritize income equalizati­on for all residents of its member countries.

But such a developmen­t in the EU will unavoidabl­y lead to a “north-south” problem within the bloc, re ecting the

gaps between the developed north and the less developed south. Any decision to redistribu­te funds from the northern area to people of various walks of life in the south would be strongly resisted by not only wealthy people but also people with average incomes in the north. Formidable hurdles thus exist to accomplish­ing income equalizati­on.

For that matter, when compared with the EU, which groups countries in the same region, it is obvious that income equalizati­on is a more di cult challenge for the Group of Seven leading developed economies and the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, for instance. e reason is that their members are from various parts of the world. It is hard to expect the G7 and the OECD to have their member countries in an inclusive mindset to be on the same page.

In the meantime, the world today is seeing wide-area, dispersed cooperatio­n gain momentum for a variety of reasons in many parts of the world. If the preference for “production for local consumptio­n” grows within each geographic­ally dispersed cooperatio­n framework to the extent that economic integratio­n progresses in each region, a serious debate may start on equalizing incomes for all people living in every member state.

Equalizing incomes on a global level may not be attainable under a paradigm of requiring “wealthy” residents in developed countries alone to provide funds to be simply redistribu­ted to people in emerging and developing countries. It is imperative for each of them to strive to raise income levels of their population on their own.

RECONCILE DUAL TASKS

ey also need to reconcile two parallel tasks of exerting themselves to improve income levels and curbing carbon dioxide emissions. To enable them to succeed in these dual tasks, it is essential to exactly understand that industrial structures differ from country to country.

When the 26th U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) was held in the United Kingdom last year, the host country faced the criticism that it is inappropri­ate to compare the yardstick for emissions control in a country specializi­ng in the nancial and real estate sectors with that in countries continuous­ly supplying manufactur­ed goods.

is narrative constitute­s part of the aforementi­oned opinion that the difference between, or among, industrial structures in the countries concerned should be taken into considerat­ion.

It is inconceiva­ble that we will have a situation in which all countries in the world will opt to get rid of industrial production. Unless some people somewhere continue to engage in production activity, global consumptio­n demand will not be met.

Moreover, there are voices demanding that measures for reducing carbon dioxide emissions be formulated only a er taking into account trade structures that di er from country to country. e theory goes that domestic consumptio­n in countries with trade de cits can be somewhat sustainabl­e thanks to the presence of countries with trade surpluses earned while emitting carbon dioxide.

Countries with trade surpluses, of course, receive export proceeds. But we need to question whether those proceeds are set at a “fair” level by re ecting various factors. is issue is expected to be at the heart of discussion once countries begin serious negotiatio­ns on how to shape the so-called carbon border adjustment mechanism — carbon taxes levied on imports on the border — to ensure a proportion­ate administra­tive burden for businesses and so on.

What should Japan speci cally do in connection with this issue while highly complicate­d discussion­s about it are underway among various countries?

e developed world now enjoys a high standard of living, an achievemen­t it needed a few centuries to realize after the Industrial Revolution. Over the course of those centuries, an unpreceden­tedly phenomenal amount of energy was used especially because only low-level technologi­es were available. If sophistica­ted technologi­es of today had already been available from the very beginning of the Industrial Revolution, humans could have attained a decent level of living while still using a far less amount of energy.

Japanese industry is still capable of accelerati­ng the developmen­t of technologi­es for energy-saving and for reducing carbon dioxide emissions. It also has expertise to promote technologi­es for miniaturiz­ation and for reducing weight. With these beliefs in mind, it is advisable for Japan to put more resources and energy into these particular

elds so that it will be able to enhance its ability to deal with environmen­tal challenges.

When the internatio­nal community goes on seeking to attain economic developmen­t worldwide in a balanced way, disputes and friction do occur among nations and peoples. But it can be possible to lessen them. Once developed countries opt to shi the focus of economic activity from manufactur­ing to services, they will be able to reduce energy consumptio­n. Still, the world will need places that engage in manufactur­ing.

e more manufactur­ers pursue the developmen­t trend toward lighter, thinner, shorter and smaller products in a positive sense, the more they will be able to contribute to solving environmen­tal problems. I am sure that Japan can increase its contributi­on to the world by stepping up technologi­cal developmen­t and inexpensiv­ely providing other countries with the fruits of such endeavors. (May 6)

Countries need to reconcile two parallel tasks of exerting themselves to improve income levels and curbing carbon dioxide emissions.

Watanabe is president of the Tokyobased Institute for Internatio­nal Monetary Affairs. Previously, he has served as vice finance minister for internatio­nal affairs and governor and chief executive officer of the Japan Bank for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

 ?? Yuya Yokobori / Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? The headquarte­rs of the European Commission in Brussels, in June 2016
Yuya Yokobori / Yomiuri Shimbun file photo The headquarte­rs of the European Commission in Brussels, in June 2016

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Japan