Stabroek News

Opinion: Reform global financial system now or risk societal collapse

- By Commonweal­th Secretary-General, The Rt Hon Patricia Scotland KC

Our planet is our only home, and it provides us with all the essentials for survival - the land we inhabit, the water we drink, the food we consume, and the air we breathe. Despite this, our reliance on fossil fuels has brought our planet to the brink of collapse. Our planet, land and ocean are suffering, and so are we.

Back in 1989 in Langkawi, Commonweal­th leaders predicted the “permanent and irreversib­le damage” to the environmen­t and demanded a coordinate­d global response. The world did not believe the warning. Their prediction came true. We have seen the consequenc­es, not least recently in climate disasters in Vanuatu, Mozambique and Malawi.

Our planet is changing rapidly from melting glaciers to bleached coral reefs. Over the past two decades, more than 7,000 major natural disasters, mostly climate-related, occurred across the world, claiming 1.2 million lives, affecting 4.3 billion people and resulting in $3 trillion in economic losses. This represents a 75 per cent increase in the number of disasters and an 80 per cent increase in economic losses compared to the two decades before them. According to the United Nations, developing countries suffer 99 per cent of climate change related casualties.

The situation is particular­ly dire in the Commonweal­th. Our 56 member countries, of which 33 are small states, are being hit on all sides by the destructiv­e forces of climate change, the lingering consequenc­es of the pandemic and the challenge of rising debt.

Each of these threats is seismic even on its own, but together, they combine to form a lethal cocktail that amplifies existing social, political, and economic inequaliti­es, jeopardisi­ng stability, resilience and developmen­t prospects. Millions of people’s lives and livelihood­s are being affected. But they are fighting. We must too.

There is no question about how climate vulnerabil­ity is driving up the cost of capital and posing a grave threat to debt sustainabi­lity. Even if a country is financiall­y prudent,

a single disaster can wipe out most of its GDP, plunging it from a middle or low-income country to a noincome one.

That country then has to borrow more to rebuild, at interest rates much higher than they would otherwise be due to its vulnerabil­ity. Recent figures show that the least developed countries borrow only half as much as developed countries but spend three times more on interest payments. The higher cost of capital further impedes their ability to invest in long-term resilience and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Vulnerable countries, which have contribute­d the least to climate change, are paying twice for the damage endured during disasters and through higher costs of capital they have to borrow to rebuild. As a result of a combinatio­n of these and other factors, 60 per cent of vulnerable countries are in debt distress or at high risk of it. This is unjust and morally unconscion­able.

We simply cannot stand by and watch vulnerable countries either being engulfed by rising seas or choked by crushing debt.

The Commonweal­th has been bold and consistent in its leadership and practical support on these issues. We were instrument­al in the success of the heavily indebted poor countries initiative and just last year, the call from the 2022 Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting for more action on loss and damage was a catalyst for the new fund agreed upon at the Sharm el-Sheikh Climate Change Conference (COP27) months later.

But our work alone is not enough. To address climate change and achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, $4 trillion is needed every year by 2030. But climate finance flows in 2021 reached only $630 billion.

This requires bold and urgent action from a wide range of stakeholde­rs and sources on reforming the global financial architectu­re to deliver more funding for vulnerable countries, on considerin­g vulnerabil­ity when lending developmen­t finance and on debt restructur­ing, including through large-scale debt-for-nature swaps.

To create truly meaningful change, we must move beyond the narrow analysis of GDP as a criterion for assessing eligibilit­y for support to a more nuanced understand­ing of broader factors that tend to amplify vulnerabil­ity and diminish resilience. In this regard, the Commonweal­th’s Universal Vulnerabil­ity Index provides a solid basis to better target support for those who need it most.

We know investing to deliver finance to vulnerable countries will build resilience and create virtuous circles of sustainabl­e growth and opportunit­y for everyone, everywhere.

It is imperative to recognise that no individual nation can tackle the climate crisis alone. It is our shared responsibi­lity to work together in order to prevent a global societal collapse, while we still have time. The opportunit­y to act is rapidly diminishin­g, and we can no longer afford to make incrementa­l progress. Urgent and substantia­l change is necessary, and it must happen now, not tomorrow.

 ?? ?? Patricia Scotland
Patricia Scotland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana