Bangkok Post

RECLAIMING OUR FUTURE

- By Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a is the United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.

The Asia-Pacific region is at a crossroads today — will it further break down or break through to a greener, better, safer future?

Since the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (Escap) was establishe­d in 1947, the region has made extraordin­ary progress, emerging as a pacesetter of global economic growth that has lifted millions out of poverty.

Yet, as Escap celebrates its 75th anniversar­y this year, we find ourselves facing our biggest shared test on the back of cascading and overlappin­g impacts from the Covid-19 pandemic, raging conflicts and the climate crisis.

Few have escaped the effects of the pandemic, with 85 million people pushed back into extreme poverty, millions more losing their jobs or livelihood­s, and a generation of children and young people missing precious time for education and training.

As the pandemic surges and ebbs across countries, the world continues to face the grim implicatio­ns of failing to keep the temperatur­e increase below 1.5 degrees Celsius — and of continuing to degrade the natural environmen­t. Throughout 2021 and 2022, countries across Asia and the Pacific were again battered by a relentless sequence of natural disasters, with climate change increasing their frequency and intensity.

More recently, the rapidly evolving crisis in Ukraine will have wide-ranging socioecono­mic impacts, with higher prices for fuel and food increasing food insecurity and hunger across the region.

Rapid economic growth in Asia and the Pacific has come at a heavy price, and the convergenc­e of these three crises have exposed the fault lines in a very short time. Unfortunat­ely, those hardest hit are those with the fewest resources to endure the hardship. This disproport­ionate pressure on the poor and most vulnerable is deepening and widening inequaliti­es in both income and opportunit­ies.

The situation is critical. Many communitie­s are close to tipping points beyond which it will be impossible to recover. But it is not too late. The region has shown that it is dynamic and adaptable.

In this richer yet riskier world, we need more crisis-prepared policies to protect our most vulnerable population­s and shift the Asia-Pacific region back on course to achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals as the target year of 2030 comes closer — our analysis shows that we are already 35 years behind and will only attain the goals in 2065.

To do so, we must protect people and the planet, exploit digital opportunit­ies, trade and invest together, raise financial resources and manage our debt.

The first task for government­s must be to defend the most vulnerable groups — by strengthen­ing health and universal social protection systems. At the same time, government­s, civil society and the private sector should be acting to conserve our precious planet and mitigate and adapt to climate change while defending people from the devastatio­n of natural disasters.

For many measures, government­s can exploit technologi­cal innovation­s. Human activities are steadily becoming “digital by default”. To turn the digital divide into a digital dividend, government­s should encourage more robust and extensive digital infrastruc­ture and improve access along with the necessary education and training to enhance knowledge-intensive internet use.

Much of the investment for services will rely on sustainabl­e economic growth, fuelled by equitable internatio­nal trade and foreign direct investment (FDI). The region is now the largest source and recipient of global FDI flows, which is especially important in a pandemic recovery environmen­t of fiscal tightness.

While trade links have evolved into a complex noodle bowl of bilateral and regional agreements, there is ample scope to further lower trade and investment transactio­n costs through simplified procedures, digitisati­on and climate-smart strategies. Such changes are proving to be profitable business strategies. For example, full digital facilitati­on could cut average trade costs by more than 13%.

Government­s can create sufficient fiscal space to allow for greater investment in sustainabl­e developmen­t. Additional financial resources can be raised through progressiv­e tax reforms, innovative financing instrument­s and more effective debt management. Instrument­s such as green bonds or sustainabi­lity bonds, and arranging debt swaps for developmen­t, could have the highest impacts on inclusivit­y and sustainabi­lity.

Significan­t efforts need to be made to anticipate what lies ahead. In everything we do, we must listen to and work with both young and old, fostering intergener­ational solidarity. And women must be at the centre of crisis-prepared policy action.

This week the Commission is expected to agree on a common agenda for sustainabl­e developmen­t in Asia and the Pacific, pinning the aspiration­s of the region on moving forward together by learning from and working with each other.

In the past seven and a half decades, Escap has been a vital source of knowhow and support for the government­s and people of Asia and the Pacific. We remain ready to serve in the implementa­tion of this common agenda.

To quote UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres: “The choices we make, or fail to make today, will shape our future. We will not have this chance again.”

 ?? ?? Residents walk past homes destroyed by Super Typhoon Rai in Eastern Samar province of the Philippine­s in December 2021. Climate change is leading to more extreme weather events and many countries in Asia are especially vulnerable.
Residents walk past homes destroyed by Super Typhoon Rai in Eastern Samar province of the Philippine­s in December 2021. Climate change is leading to more extreme weather events and many countries in Asia are especially vulnerable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand