From the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development - UNCTAD
UNCTAD XII
Accra - Ghana
20-25 April 2008
Report of the Secretary-General of
UNCTAD to
UNCTAD XII on
Globalization for Development: Opportunities and Challenges
, 85 Pages
|
UNCTAD News: UNCTAD XII Special Issue
Cover, Content
- Preface: From Midrand to Accra
I. New realities and persistent challenges
A. Significant advances
B. Apprehension C. Persistent challenges
D. The capital flows paradox
E. From "getting prices right" to "getting development right"
II. Coherence in global policymaking: Multilateralism at a crossroads
A. Systemic imbalances in global finance and a new mercantilism
B. The case for a multilateral effort in global finance
C. Sustainable financing for sustained development
D. Redressing asymmetries in the multilateral trading system
III. Key trade and development issues in the current global economic environment
A. The emergence of the "new South"
B. Energy security
C. Mobility and development: Labour integration
D. Services: The new trade and development frontier
E. Commodities: Sustaining the new growth trend
F. Environment, climate change and development: The challenges ahead
G. Technology and innovation for trade and competitiveness
IV. Strengthening productive capacities, trade and investment: The enabling environment
A. The global framework and the enabling environment
B. National policies to promote an enabling environment
V. Strengthening UNCTAD’s role, impact and neffectiveness
A. Improving the working methods of UNCTAD
B. Enhancing UNCTAD’s role in emerging issues
C. Enhancing UNCTAD’s role in the context of United Nations reform.
Background Statistical Charts and Tables for the
Report of the Secretary General of UNCTAD to UNCTAD XII
Globalization for Development: Opportunities and Challenges
List o f charts and tables
Chart 1.- GDP per capita (log scale) in selected developing countries
and regions compared to the G7, 1970-2005
Chart 2.- Real GDP growth, 1995-2006
Chart 3.- Real investment, 1995-2006
Chart 4.- Real consumption, 1995-2006
Chart 5.- Real exports of goods and services, 1995-2006
Chart 6.- Real imports of goods and services, 1995-2006
Chart 7.- Employment (1996=100) and unemployment (percent) 1996-2006
Chart 8.- Current account balance as percent of GDP, 1995-2006
Chart 9.- Unit labour costs, 1993-2006
Chart 10.- Real effective exchange rates, 1995-2006
Chart 11.- Official Development Assistance from DAC donors, 1988-2005
Chart 12.- Real short-term interest rate and real GDP growth, 1986-2006,
South and South-East Asia / South and South East Asia, including China
Chart 13.- Real short-term interest rate and real GDP growth, 1986-2006,
Latin America / Latin America, less Brazil
Chart 14.- Real short-term interest rate and real GDP growth, 1997-2006,
Eastern European economies
Chart 15.- Real short-term interest rate and real GDP growth, 1986-2006,
Sub-Saharan Africa
Chart 16.- Real short-term interest rate and real GDP growth, 1970-2006,
United States / European Union
Chart 17.- Governance and per capita income growth, selected groups of
economies, 1996-2006
Table 1.- Real domestic product
Table 2.- Current account
Table 3.- Trade in merchandise: Total exports
Table 4.- Trade in services: Total exports
Table 5.- Direct Investment in reporting economy (FDI inward)
Table 6.- Aid to GNI ratio, developing economies
Table 7.- Official Development Assistance from All Donors to Developing
Countries
Total, Economies in Transition; Heavely Indebted Poor Countries
Disbursment
Globalization for Development:
Opportunities and Challenges
Theme:
Addressing the
opportunities and challenges of globalization for development.
By now it is widely acknowledged
that globalization has generated remarkable wealth and prosperity
for particular countries and particular industries. But those
benefits have not reached large swathes of the world population; in
numerous developing countries, and even within some of the more
prosperous countries, there are many people who have not benefited
or who are even worse off. Given that globalization will continue
for the foreseeable future, the conference will explore ways to
harness globalization to raise living standards, reduce poverty and
ensure sustainable development.
|
Sub-themes:
- Enhancing coherence at all
levels for sustainable economic development and poverty reduction in
global policy-making, including the contribution of regional approaches.
Coherence is about making sure that international policies work in
tandem towards our common goals. This therefore includes ensuring that
the multilateral, rules-based trading regime is better aligned to help
find solutions to key issues on agricultural market access, domestic
support in agriculture, industrial tariffs and services. It may also
require the adjustment of regional integration agreements, to ensure
that they help rather than hinder the international trading system and
its development objectives.
Coherence may also include the global financial system, which by
comparison with the trade system is far less regulated, and has failed
in the past to protect some economies from the disastrous impacts of
external economic shocks that can overturn years of careful planning and
austerity. At the same time, many of the countries most vulnerable to
external shocks are in great need of financing to develop and to reduce
poverty. Regulating private capital flows and speculation while also
raising the funds that developing countries need to stabilize their
economies requires coherence - coherence, or agreement, between
developing and developed countries and among developing countries
themselves.
- Key trade and development
issues and the new realities in the geography of the world economy.
Over the past 15 years or so, developing countries have accounted for a
growing share of world trade and investment, and that share continues to
soar. The result is a totally new landscape for world economic
relations, one in which the countries of the South are not only doing
more business with one another, but are increasingly trading with and
investing in developed countries.
Rising demand and prices for oil, gas and other commodities mean booms
for some countries, but economic hardship for others. The continuing
exploitation and consumption of fossil fuels is devastating the climate,
requiring the development of alternative energy sources, such as
biofuels.
All of these reali-ties will have huge
ramifications for trade and development. Issues to be addressed at
UNCTAD XII include how developing countries that are prospering from the
boom can better translate their revenues into long-term development
gains.
- Enhancing an enabling
environment at all levels to strengthen productive capacity, trade and
investment: mobilizing resources and harnessing knowledge for
development.
Productive capacities, trade and investment are interlinked and mutually
reinforcing elements of the national and international economic
structure. There is a great deal of cumulative causation between them.
Reflecting this, an enabling environment needs to operate simultaneously
at the global level -- through policies that promote an open and
equitable environment -- and at the national level, through policies
that foster growth, investment and entrepreneurship, as well as
technology, innovation and employment.
Critical international issues here include the global finance and trade
systems (including the intellectual property rights systems); the rise
of South-South cooperation and integration; and the role of Foreign
Direct Investment (FDI) and international investment agreements.
National level policy issues include macroeconomic policy and the
complementary trade and industrial policies that can help to boost
competitiveness, technological upgrading, and domestic value-added.
- Strengthening UNCTAD: enhancing
its development role, impact, and institutional effectiveness.
As the world changes and globalization becomes a more powerful force,
UNCTAD must constantly refine its efforts to help developing countries.
As the United Nations focal point for trade and development, and the
interrelated issues of finance, investment, technology and sustainable
development, it brings more than four decades of experience to the
service of development.
UNCTAD's 12th ministerial conference offers a forum to discuss ways of
improving the organization's working methods. It will also help ensure
that it delivers high-quality and sharply focused research and analysis;
that the intergovernmental machinery is action-oriented and effective;
and that UNCTAD's technical cooperation activities help create
beneficial synergies and add greater value, for example by contributing
to the "One UN" concept.
|
-
Ministerial Communiqué of Landlocked Developing Countries
TD/439,
(4/23/2008),
3 Pages
-
Draft report of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
at its twelfth session
TD/L.399,
(4/23/2008),
4 Pages
-
Draft UNCTAD XII negotiated text: The following paragraphs have now been
agreed ad referendum, and replace the paragraphs of the same numbers in
document TD/L.398
TD/L.398/Add.4,
(4/22/2008),
2 Pages
-
Summary of the World Investment Forum – Sessions I and II
TD/435,
(4/20/2008),
4 Pages
-
Summary of the High-level Segment: Trade and development for Africa’s
prosperity - Action and direction
TD/L.402,
(4/22/2008),
3 Pages
-
Draft UNCTAD XII negotiated text: The following paragraphs have now been
agreed ad referendum, and replace the paragraphs of the same numbers in
document TD/L.398
TD/L.398/Add.3,
(4/22/2008),
1 Pages
-
Draft UNCTAD XII negotiated text: The following paragraphs have now been
agreed ad referendum, and replace the paragraphs of the same numbers in
document TD/L.398
TD/L.398/Add.2,
(4/21/2008),
2 Pages
-
Summary of the UNCTAD XII pre-event, Workshop on Development Strategies
in Africa
TD/L.400,
(4/20/2008),
2 Pages
-
Civil Society Forum Declaration to UNCTAD XII: Poverty anywhere
constitutes a danger to prosperity everywhere
TD/437,
(4/21/2008),
11 Pages
-
Summary of the World Investment Forum – Session III : A New Emerging
Market for FDI
TD/438,
(4/21/2008),
2 Pages
-
Draft UNCTAD XII negotiated text: The following paragraphs have now been
agreed ad referendum, and replace the paragraphs of the same numbers in
document TD/L.398.
TD/L.398/Add.1,
(4/14/2008),
3 Pages
-
Ministerial Declaration of the Group of 77 and China on the occasion of
UNCTAD XII
TD/436,
(4/20/2008),
6 Pages
PDF available in: href="http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//td436_en.pdf" target="_blank">English
Français
Español
-
Declaration of the Least Developed Countries Ministerial Meeting at
UNCTAD XII
TD/434,
(4/19/2008),
7 Pages
-
General Information
TD/Inf.40,
(4/19/2008),
2 Pages
-
Draft UNCTAD XII negotiated text
TD/L.398,
(4/9/2008),
41 Pages
-
High-level Segment of Heads of State and Government - Trade and
development for Africa's prosperity: action and direction (Issues note)
TD/433,
(4/14/2008),
10 Pages
-
Outcome of the high-level workshop for African LDCs
TD/432,
(4/2/2008),
3 Pages
-
Strengthening UNCTAD: enhancing its impact and institutional
effectiveness
TD/431,
(3/31/2008),
8 Pages
-
Report of the hearing with civil society and the private sector held in
Geneva, 3 March 2008
TD(XII)/PC/3,
(3/19/2008),
5 Pages
-
Organization of the work of the Conference
TD/414/Add.1,
(3/19/2008),
2 Pages
-
Strengthening UNCTAD: enhancing its development role
TD/430,
(3/10/2008),
7 Pages
The changing face of commodities in the twenty-first century
By the end of the twentieth century, commodity prices were in the doldrums,
mainly because of sluggish demand growth in relation to supply. They had been on a
downward trend in real terms since the 1980s. However, since 2002, commodity prices
have rebounded, driven largely by growing demand in newly industrializing developing
countries. If the cycle of growth and industrialization in developing countries
continues, the current commodity boom may mark the beginning of a changed
commodity economy in the twenty-first century characterized by a long-term
resurgence in the demand for, and value of, primary commodities in world trade. This
holds out the possibility that low-income commodity-dependent developing countries
may be able to generate sufficient gains from commodity trade to relieve financing
constraints and enable them to launch their economies on a sustained growth path of
rising income and poverty reduction. These prospects raise opportunities and challenges
for trade and development, and the need for appropriate policy responses. UNCTAD
XII provides an opportunity for the international community to agree on an
international action plan on commodities designed to harness development gains from
the present boom in commodity prices and to address the long-standing commodity
trade and development problems.
TD/428, -
TD/428/Corr.1, -
(3/6/2008), -
20 Pages
PDF available in: English
Français
Español
العربية
中文
Русский
-
Summary of discussions: Aid for Trade and development - towards a new
global solidarity initiative
TD/429,
(2/28/2008),
3 Pages
-
Debt management solutions for trade and development
TD/424,
(2/29/2008),
11 Pages
-
Globalization, development and poverty reduction: their social and
gender dimensions
TD/422,
(2/14/2008),
12 Pages
-
Creating an institutional environment conducive to increased foreign
investment and sustainable development
TD/426,
(2/11/2008),
7 Pages
-
Emergence of a new South and South–South trade as a vehicle for
regional and interregional integration for development
TD/425,
(2/11/2008),
17 Pages
-
Outcome of the Secretary-General’s high-level panel on the creative
economy and industries for development
TD/423,
(2/7/2008),
4 Pages
-
Harnessing knowledge and technology for development
TD/421,
(2/8/2008),
10 Pages
-
Developing productive capacities in least developed countries
TD/420,
(2/8/2008),
6 Pages
-
Provisional Agenda and Annotations
TD/414,
TD/414/Add.1,
(2/8/2008),
7 Pages
-
Report of the hearing with civil society and the private sector held in
Geneva, 28 January 2008
TD(XII)/PC/2,
(2/5/2008),
6 Pages
-
Outcome of the meeting: Globalization of port logistics: opportunities
and challenges for developing countries
TD/419,
(1/17/2008),
3 Pages
-
Outcome of the meeting: Science, technology, innovation and ICTs for
development
TD/417,
(1/17/2008),
3 Pages
-
Summary of discussions: Meeting on trade and development implications of
tourism services for developing countries
TD/427,
(2/7/2008),
3 Pages
-
Outcome of the conference: Biofuels: an option for a less
carbon-intensive economy
TD/416,
(1/17/2008),
4 Pages
-
Outcome of the India-Africa Hydrocarbon Conference and Exhibition
TD/418,
(1/18/2008),
3 Pages
-
Secretary-General’s high-level panel on the creative economy and
industries for development
TD(XII)/BP/4,
(1/17/2008),
13 Pages
-
UNCTAD XII pre-event: Globalization of port logistics: opportunities and
challenges for developing countries
TD(XII)/BP/3,
(12/10/2007),
10 Pages
-
The interface between trade and climate change policies and the role of
UNCTAD
TD(XII)/BP/2,
(11/30/2007),
-
Outcome of the expert meeting in preparation for UNCTAD XII: identifying
issues and priorities for least developed countries for action during
and beyond UNCTAD XII
TD/415,
(11/30/2007),
10 Pages
-
Pre-Conference negotiating text
TD(XII)/PC/1,
(11/13/2007),
28 Pages
-
Globalization and inclusive development
TD/B/54/7,
(8/27/2007),
8 Pages
-
Report on the conference - Global initiative on commodities:
Re-launching the commodities agenda
TD(XII)/BP/1,
(7/20/2007),
19 Pages
-
Report of the Secretary-General of UNCTAD to UNCTAD XII
TD/413,
(7/4/2007),
85 Pages
|
|
|