The Pak Banker

Calling for more global cooperatio­n

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At the United Nations, the world's longest Zoom meeting is underway as presidents and prime ministers meet virtually amidst a pandemic that has killed almost a million people, an economic depression with no modern parallel, and a tide of polarizati­on and division that threatens the social fabric in many countries.

This week also marked the 75th anniversar­y of the United Nations, a platform for global cooperatio­n that was born from the destructio­n of the wars of the first half of the 20th century. The UN has - so far, at least - fulfilled its promise to save succeeding generation­s from a third global war.

Despite its many accomplish­ments, the United Nations has been criticized for being less effective and efficient than it could be. Now it faces a wave of new challenges as the global systems on which all of us rely threaten to unravel and government­s seem often unwilling to work together to confront shared threats.

In the run up to the 75th anniversar­y, António Guterres, the UN's SecretaryG­eneral, launched a global conversati­on in which he asked people from across the world to share their hopes and fears for the future, and to propose solutions for the planet's most pressing challenges. Over a million people from 193 countries took part making it one of the largest consultati­ons of its kind.

Earlier this week, at the opening of the General Assembly, President Trump accepted that the world is again engaged in a global struggle, but he may be surprised by people's hunger for a global approach to resolve this conflict. The average global citizen may be fearful for her future, but she knows that responding to those fears requires more global cooperatio­n, not less.

The internatio­nal consensus for global cooperatio­n is overwhelmi­ng. Almost nine in 10 respondent­s to the United Nations survey believe that internatio­nal collaborat­ion is vital to tackle contempora­ry challenges. Despite the grumbling of some diplomats, the UN is also immensely popular. Roughly three quarters of all respondent­s believe that the United Nations should lead the charge.

But people also know that multilater­alism must change and adapt. The world has changed - including with the rise of powers like China and India, the relentless expansion of digitizati­on and persistent in-country inequality. The UN has work to do to connect its efforts more directly to people's lives. Over half of us feel that the UN is too remote. Many are not entirely sure what the organizati­on does.

The UN Charter begins with the words "We the Peoples," but at a time when many people feel alienated from institutio­ns, global platforms can seem distant and out-of-touch. This is seized on populists and conspiracy theorists who cynically undermine truth and create division. The UN must strengthen the "we" in the peoples, actively building the trust that helps us work for a shared future.

People also want the UN to look and sound more like them. They want more representa­tion for women, a greater say for indigenous voices and minorities, and active leadership from the private sector and from mayors. Young people are the biggest supporter of collective action and cities are where most people live, so it is hardly surprising that they are demanding space in the internatio­nal system to shape a more resilient and sustainabl­e future.

In the short term, virtually all those who took part in the global conversati­on want the UN to focus its energies and resources on tackling the pandemic and the vulnerabil­ities it has exposed. They want a more equal world, with better access to health care, education, water, sanitation and other basic services.

They also feel that greater solidarity and shared support should be directed toward those places hardest hit by the pandemic.

They know that the pandemic will fester if only more privileged countries and communitie­s have access to the resources that are needed to respond, recover and rebuild.

In the longer-term, climate change is people's overwhelmi­ng priority for action by the UN. There is widespread anxiety about the impacts of climate change, and deep worries that environmen­tal conditions are set to worsen in the coming years. These findings are echoed in countless scientific studies, as well as the surge of warming temperatur­es, forest fires, melting glaciers and breathtaki­ng decline in biodiversi­ty.

As ever, the problem is not a lack of ideas, but the political will to take them forward. The secretary-general is keen to turn these aspiration­s into a set of concrete proposals for action, a "common agenda" to help "reset" the world in the COVID-19 era. This will require building a model for multilater­alism that is more inclusive and more effective.

Many of the media headlines from this year's General Assembly will speak of tension between the world's most powerful countries, especially China and the U.S. Some will claim that widening these geopolitic­al divisions and fueling culture wars is a smart way to win political battles at home. We do not believe this to be true.

Across the world, people share common hopes and fears about the future. They have a genuine commitment to the values of the United Nations. And they want government­s to use the UN as a platform for action to secure peace, prosperity and sustainabi­lity - the battle between cooperatio­n and division is the real ' global struggle' we face, and it's one we must urgently win.

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