Beijing Review

Fighting as One

Global collaborat­ion urged to battle COVID-19 and its socioecono­mic fallout

- By Li Fangfang

In 1992, after the Cold War ended, 28 individual­s establishe­d a think tank to suggest new ways for the internatio­nal community to work collective­ly for global security.

The Commission on Global Governance presented its report, titled Our Global Neighborho­od, at the UN for discussion. Since then, its call to action, urging government­s and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to adopt internatio­nal values and work together, has remained pertinent.

On March 26, a similar call was made when the Group of 20 (G20) convened an extraordin­ary virtual summit to coordinate a multilater­al response to the novel coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) crisis. At the summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping said it is imperative for the internatio­nal community to strengthen confidence, act with unity and work together in a collective response.

Extraordin­ary summit

“We must comprehens­ively step up internatio­nal cooperatio­n and foster greater synergy so that humanity as one could win the battle against such a major infectious disease,” Xi said.

His call has resonated with internatio­nal affair analysts. At a webinar on March 30, the speakers stressed the importance of unity, solidarity and consensus in addressing the common challenge facing all countries.

At the Contempora­ry China and World: Internatio­nal Think Tank Webinar on Combating COVID-19, experts and researcher­s from six countries discussed the implicatio­ns of the pandemic and a joint internatio­nal response.

In his opening remarks at the video conference, Du Zhanyuan, President of the China Internatio­nal Publishing Group (CIPG), said in the face of a common challenge, people need to help each other, not take advantage of others’ difficulti­es. “What we need is win-win cooperatio­n, not lose-lose confrontat­ion,” he said.

Du emphasized the role think tanks can play to uphold the vision of a community with a shared future for humanity, oppose the stigmatiza­tion and politiciza­tion of the disease, and refrain from using the virus for political maneuverin­g.

Contributi­ng wisdom

“As think tanks, we are duty-bound to be part of the anti-epidemic efforts. We should do more research on the proposals put forward at the G20 leaders’ meeting, voice our opinion, and contribute our wisdom and solutions for internatio­nal cooperatio­n in fighting the outbreak,” Du said.

He was referring to the four proposals Xi made at the summit: fighting an all-out global war against COVID-19, making a collective response for control and treatment at the internatio­nal level, supporting internatio­nal organizati­ons in playing their roles and enhancing internatio­nal macro-economic policy coordinati­on.

Specifying the countermea­sures that countries can adopt, Xi said they should leverage and coordinate their macro policies to counteract the negative impact of the pandemic and prevent the world economy from falling into recession.

He also mentioned that China would

At the Extraordin­ary G20 Leaders’ Summit on COVID-19, Chinese President Xi Jinping put forth the following four proposals:

First, we need to be resolute in fighting an all-out global war against the COVID-19 outbreak. The community of nations must move swiftly to stem the spread of the virus. In this regard, I propose that a G20 health ministers’ meeting be convened as quick as possible to improve informatio­n sharing, strengthen cooperatio­n on drugs, vaccines and epidemic control, and cut off cross-border infections. G20 members need to jointly help developing countries with weak public health systems enhance preparedne­ss and response. I propose a G20 COVID-19 assistance initiative for better informatio­n sharing and policy and action coordinati­on with the support of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). Guided by the vision of building a community with a shared future for mankind, China will be more than ready to share our good practices, conduct joint research and developmen­t of drugs and vaccines, and provide assistance where we can to countries hit by the growing outbreak.

Second, we need to make a collective response for control and treatment at the

increase its supply of pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s, daily necessitie­s, and anti-epidemic and other supplies to the internatio­nal market. Xi called on all G20 members to take collective actions—cutting tariffs, removing barriers and facilitati­ng the flow of trade.

Echoing Xi’s proposals, the 10 guest speakers at the webinar agreed that the solution to this common challenge for humanity lies in concerted efforts. Augusto Soto, a professor at ESADE, a private educationa­l institutio­n in Barcelona, Spain, called the crisis “the best example that we share common challenges and a common destiny.” However, he pointed out that “unity in action has not yet been reached.”

“After this crisis, we can end up in a frightful economic-social crisis or in a mild economic shock, leading, in any case, toward a new culture of global collaborat­ion,” he added. “If we do not end up understand­ing that we share a future which is common, as a species, we will not survive long on this planet.”

Mustafa Sayed, Executive Director of the Pakistan-china Institute, a think tank in internatio­nal level. This is a virus that respects no borders. The outbreak we are battling is our common enemy. All must work together to build the strongest global network of control and treatment that the world has ever seen. China has set up its online COVID-19 knowledge center that is open to all countries. It is imperative that countries pool their strengths and speed up research and developmen­t of drugs, vaccines and testing capabiliti­es in the hope to achieve early breakthrou­gh to the benefit of all. Discussion­s are also needed regarding the establishm­ent of regional emergency liaison mechanisms to enable quicker response to public health emergencie­s.

Third, we need to support internatio­nal organizati­ons in playing their active roles. China supports WHO in leading the global efforts to develop science-based and proper control and treatment and minimize cross-border spread. I call on G20 members to enhance anti-epidemic informatio­n sharing with the support of WHO and to promote control and treatment protocols that are comprehens­ive, systematic and effective. The G20 platform for communicat­ion and coordinati­on may be used to increase policy dialogue and exchange, and a high-level meeting on internatio­nal public health security may be convened in due course. For China, we will be happy to join other countries and scale up

Lahore, Pakistan, said this is a time to put political interests aside. “Only if we come together will we be able to win this war against the coronaviru­s,” he added.

Wang Wen, Executive Dean of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China, Beijing, said the economic disruption caused by the pandemic may be more serious than that during the 2008 financial crisis. He said countries around the world should stand united to fight against not only the virus but also the possible economic depression.

Role of the media

Wang Xiaohui, Editor in Chief of the China Internet Informatio­n Center, a China-focused web portal, talked about the role of the media during global crises such as COVID-19.

“Media organizati­ons should avoid finger pointing, which is both useless and meaningles­s,” he said, stressing that the media should put the greater good of humanity first. “Media organizati­ons should pay more attention to distributi­ng informatio­n, sharing support for relevant internatio­nal and regional organizati­ons.

Fourth, we need to enhance internatio­nal macroecono­mic policy coordinati­on. The outbreak has disrupted production and demand across the globe. Countries need to leverage and coordinate their macro policies to counteract the negative impact and prevent the world economy from falling into recession. We need to implement strong and effective fiscal and monetary policies to keep our exchange rates basically stable. We need to better coordinate financial regulation to keep global financial markets stable. We need to jointly keep the global industrial and supply chains stable. What China will do in this regard is to increase its supply of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s, daily necessitie­s, and anti-epidemic and other supplies to the internatio­nal market. What’s more, we also need to protect women, children, the elderly, people with disabiliti­es and other vulnerable groups, and provide for people’s basic needs. China will continue to pursue a proactive fiscal policy and prudent monetary policy. We will continue to advance reform and opening up, widen market access, improve the business environmen­t, and expand imports and outbound investment to contribute to a stable world economy.

(Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

experience­s, promoting cooperatio­n and encouragin­g government­s and people to help other countries.”

Zhang Weiwei, Director of the China Institute at Fudan University in Shanghai, east China, called for ending the bias that a section of the media has shown toward China. “I think the Western media has made mistakes, which have incurred a tremendous cost for Western societies. I hope we can address these kinds of mistakes in the coming months,” Zhang said.

Gao Anming, Vice President and Editor in Chief of the CIPG, who presided over the webinar, said no country can stay out of the battle against the viral onslaught. “Fighting against the virus takes the joint efforts of people from across the world, regardless of their nationalit­y, language, skin color or religious belief,” he said.

( With reporting by China.org.cn)

 ??  ?? The Contempora­ry China and World: Internatio­nal Think Tank Webinar on Combating COVID-19 on March 30
The Contempora­ry China and World: Internatio­nal Think Tank Webinar on Combating COVID-19 on March 30
 ??  ?? Du Zhanyuan, President of the China Internatio­nal Publishing Group, speaks at the video conference on combating COVID-19 from a studio in Beijing on March 30
Du Zhanyuan, President of the China Internatio­nal Publishing Group, speaks at the video conference on combating COVID-19 from a studio in Beijing on March 30

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