FEATURE STORY

Action Urged on Climate Change, Growth Slowdown

October 10, 2015



STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • As the 2015 Annual Meetings came to a close in Lima, Peru, the focus shifted to the obstacles to ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity.
  • In its communiqué, the Development Committee said economic risks have risen for 2015 and 2016, weighing on confidence in many developing countries.
  • “While we remain confident of ending extreme poverty, the final stretch will be extremely difficult because we are in the midst of a period of slow global growth,” said President Kim.

One week ago, the World Bank Group announced that the number of people living in extreme poverty was projected to dip below 10% of the world’s population in 2015 for the first time.

But as the 2015 Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund came to a close in Lima, Peru, the focus shifted to the obstacles to ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity: climate change, weak global growth, and ongoing crises in fragile states.

In its communiqué, the 25-member Development Committee of the Bank Group and Fund said economic risks have risen for 2015 and 2016. "Prospects of tighter financing conditions, slowing trade, and renewed weakness in commodity prices are weighing on confidence in many developing countries," it said. The committee called on the Bank Group and IMF to monitor economic risks and vulnerabilities and "enhance their assistance" to countries.

In a speech to the full membership of the Bank Group and Fund, Kim acknowledged the challenging conditions.

"While we remain confident of ending extreme poverty, the final stretch will be extremely difficult because we are in the midst of a period of slow global growth, the end of the commodity super-cycle, pending interest rate hikes, and continued flight of capital out of emerging markets," said Kim.

"To spur growth, every dollar of public spending should be scrutinized for impact. Every effort must be made to improve productivity," he said. "And in a period when banks are de-risking, we have to ensure that capital is accessible — especially for small business owners and entrepreneurs who will create jobs."

The Annual Meetings — the first to be held in Latin America since 1967 — dealt with a wide variety of global issues, as well as some focused on the host region. A series of livestreamed events discussed inequality, the economic slowdown, renewable energy, climate change, and the Bank’s twin goals of ending extreme poverty by 2030 and boosting shared prosperity. The events featured government ministers, development experts, CEOs, and celebrities. The Bank also released economic updates during the week for Latin America and the Caribbean, East Asia and Pacific, Africa, and South Asia.

One pressing global issue that drew particular attention was the global crisis surrounding refugees and migrants. The Development Committee, in the communiqué, said the crisis requires "targeted support" for "countries and regions in turmoil, especially in the Middle East and North Africa, but also in other fragile and conflict states."

Kim, earlier in the week, agreed: "For all involved, the refugee crisis is an immensely difficult challenge," he said. "The World Bank Group has been assisting the host communities of the refugees in Lebanon and Jordan for the past few years, and now we’re exploring new ways to increase our help for Syria’s neighbors."


" If world leaders do not find a path to low-carbon growth that will keep global warming below an increase of 2 degrees Celsius, there is little hope of ending extreme poverty — and even more broadly, there is little hope of preserving the Earth as we know it for our children and grandchildren. "
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Jim Yong Kim

World Bank Group President

On Oct. 10, the United Nations, the World Bank Group, and the Islamic Development Bank Group announced a joint initiative to scale up financing in the Middle East and North Africa to help countries hosting significant refugee populations, countries impacted by conflict, as well as countries that have significant investment needs to achieve economic recovery.

"Climate change and natural disasters put hard-earned development gains at risk, particularly for the poor and vulnerable," said the Development Committee. It asked the Bank Group to help countries assess climate risk, build resilience and "scale up its technical and financial support and mobilize resources."

Finance ministers of the "Vulnerable Twenty" (V20) countries most at risk from climate change, representing close to 700 million people, said this week that an average of more than 50,000 deaths a year were attributable to climate change, with the number expected to rise exponentially by 2030.

On Oct. 9, following the Climate Ministerial meeting hosted by Peru and France, the Bank Group pledged to boost climate-related financing by as much as a third, to as high as $29 billion annually, with the support of the Bank Group’s member countries.

"The World Bank Group stands ready to scale up its support to meet increasing demand from countries," Kim said in a press conference Oct. 8.

For their part, countries must "show real ambition" at the climate change conference in Paris in December, he said.

"Political will for urgent action is critical. We believe there are politically credible pathways to deliver $100 billion a year in climate financing for developing countries by 2020," he said.

"If world leaders do not find a path to low-carbon growth that will keep global warming below an increase of 2 degrees Celsius, there is little hope of ending extreme poverty — and even more broadly, there is little hope of preserving the Earth as we know it for our children and grandchildren," said Kim.

The Development Committee also addressed a number of other important issues:

  • It endorsed the World Bank Group’s role in coordinating with governments, multilateral organizations, the private sector and civil society to mobilize funding for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) — a set of global goals to be achieved by 2030. They were approved last month at the United Nations General Assembly.

    "We stress the need to focus on inclusive growth, jobs, infrastructure, human development, and health systems, and to deepen the World Bank Group’s engagement in fragile and conflict states," said the committee.  It also called on the International Finance Corporation and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency to "play a more catalytic role to mobilize private sector investment and finance for development."
  • It urged the Bank Group and IMF to help countries stem "illicit finance and the underlying activities, including tax evasion, corruption, criminal activities, and collusion," that deprive developing countries of vital resources they need.
  • It praised the Global Monitoring Report for tracking the progress of the Millennium Development Goals, which will be replaced by the SDGs. The latest report, released during the Meetings, "shows that changes in global demography will profoundly affect the trajectory of global development during the 2030 Agenda period. With the right policies, demographic change can help growth both in developing and developed economies."
  • And it stressed the importance of strengthening data quality and coverage in developing countries — and the availability of data for policy-making and for monitoring and implementing the SDGs.  It called on the Bank Group and IMF to increase support to developing countries to help them build data capacity and invest in evidence.


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