Daily Trust

Investment­s to developing countries may plunge by 50%

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday

Global foreign direct investment (FDI) in developing countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America is projected to plunge by 25 to 50 percent this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This also threatens the world’s ability to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t with an estimated funding gap of $2.5 trillion annually to implement, now even wider due to the pandemic.

This was the centre point at a discussion involving leading experts from global institutio­ns that participat­ed at the Global Manufactur­ing and Industrial­isation Summit (#GMIS2020) virtual edition.

A statement by Reethu Thachil, the spokespers­on for the GMIS, the experts said the pandemic however provides opportunit­y to accelerate progress towards collaborat­ive solutions developmen­t issues.

Dr. Bernardo Calzadilla­Sarmiento, Managing Director, Directorat­e of Digitaliza­tion, Technology and Agribusine­ss at United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on (UNIDO), said prior to the crisis there was an estimated investment gap of $2.5tn per year to implement the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) but that it has been aggravated.

Dr. Alina Sorgner, Assistant Professor of Applied Data Analytics, John Cabot University Rome, said: “It might be that there is a strong digital gender divide, which means that women don’t always have the necessary resources to acquire digital technologi­es and digital skills.”

Andrey Suvorov, Head of Business Developmen­t, IIoT Cyber Security, Kaspersky, acknowledg­ed the existence of a skills gap.

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Bill Huang, Founder and CEO of CloudMinds, said the introducti­on of 5G networks would aid the rapid convergenc­e of robots.

“I believe that in a developing country, and an emerging economy, there's an opportunit­y for people to train robots, so they don't need to become migrant workers they can work from their own country. I think that's a much better way to develop the economy.”

Weixi Gong, Chief of the Investment and Technology Promotion Division at UNIDO, concluded the session by saying Industry 4.0 and Society 5.0 will alter the way we live and work, and global agency’s job to have all-inclusive means to address this.

Hosted by Yuko Yasunaga, the Head of UNIDO ITPO Tokyo, the virtual panel discussion on ‘Exploring the future of manufactur­ing and industries: Industry 4.0’s true potential in advancing the attainment of the SDGs and shaping Society 5.0’ is the eighth session of the #GMIS2020 Digital Series that will lead up to the Virtual Summit on September 4-5, 2020.

 ??  ?? Minister of Finance, Budget & National Planning, Zainab Ahmed
Minister of Finance, Budget & National Planning, Zainab Ahmed

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