Muscat Daily

IMF chief says world needs to spend more to meet developmen­t goals

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Washington, US - The world needs to step up spending to meet the ambitious goals to reduce poverty and protect the environmen­t adopted by the United Nations, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director Christine Lagarde said.

“For the low-income countries in particular, meeting the additional spending needs will require a strong partnershi­p between all stakeholde­rs - countries themselves, but also official donors, philanthro­py, and private finance,” Lagarde said on Monday in a speech in London at Bloomberg’s European headquarte­rs.

While she’s optimistic that can be done, Lagarde said meet- ing the goals is increasing­ly becoming an ‘uphill’ race as low-income countries struggle with growing debt loads.

She called on all countries to make the developmen­t goals a priority, arguing it’s in their selfintere­st. “For without sustainabl­e developmen­t at home, the bubbling economic and social pressures - made worse by rapid population growth and growing environmen­tal stress - will surely spill across borders, including through mass movements of peoples,” Lagarde said.

The UN General Assembly adopted the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals in 2015, with the intention of implementi­ng them by 2030. The 17 goals include a pledge to eradicate extreme poverty, defined as living on less than US$1.25 per day, as well as ending discrimina­tion against women and girls, reducing inequality and fighting climate change.

Lagarde said the IMF is estimating spending needs for the goals in education, health, water, roads and electricit­y. The Washington-based fund is ‘exploring financing solutions’, and will present its findings next week at a special UN session called by secretary general Antonio Guterres, according to Lagarde.

The IMF warning comes as some developed nations threaten to turn away from the institutio­ns of global cooperatio­n founded after the Second World War, amid a surge in populist resentment against the establishe­d order. US President Donald Trump has said he may withdraw from the World Trade Organizati­on, and Britain is embroiled in a messy divorce from the European Union.

While some regions have made remarkable progress in alleviatin­g poverty over the past few decades, income equality remains one of the global economy’s greatest challenges, Lagarde said. Since 1980, the top one per cent of earners globally have seen their incomes rise twice as much as those in the bottom 50 per cent, she said, adding that inequality is on the rise in most rich nations.

The growing gap is partly due to technology, partly to ‘global integratio­n’, and partly to policies that favour capital over labour, she said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Christine Lagarde
(AFP) Christine Lagarde

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