Jordan Times
Sunday, May 20, 2007
King urges partnership
between G-11, G-8
By Mohammad Ghazal
DEAD SEA — King Abdullah on Saturday opened the
Lower Middle-Income Countries Summit (G-11), calling for a partnership with the
G-8 most industrialised nations and assistance to reduce the debt of developing
states.
“We have identified specific initiatives that can serve as a practical, targeted
start-up for G-8/G-11 cooperation. These include investment in infrastructure,
support for small- and medium-sized enterprises, scientific research and
development, and technology transfer,” the King told heads of state and senior
officials of the G-11 summit, held on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.
The G-11, launched last September by King Abdullah, groups Croatia, Ecuador, El
Salvador, Georgia, Honduras, Indonesia, Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, Paraguay and
Sri Lanka.
The Monarch announced that the G-8 extended an invitation to the G-11 to discuss
the establishment of a formal, institutional relationship between the two groups
in Berlin later this year.
“The G-8’s partnership with the G-11 can multiply the positive effects its
support to each of our countries has already had. It will tell the world that
the friends of development will not be satisfied until the house of prosperity
is really open to all, that our countries are not simply welcomed up the path,
not simply left at the door, but invited, gladly, over the threshold and into
the house,” he said (see the full text of his remarks).
The G-8 of most developed countries groups Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
Japan, Russia, the UK and the US.
The King said the G-11 identified four priority areas for international support
and cooperation: Debt burden alleviation, investment promotion, trade
development and targeted grant assistance.
“These are the basics for self-sustaining prosperity, supporting the foundations
for reform, opening new opportunities for millions more people to escape poverty
and enabling our young people to build strong futures.”
He said developing countries can enhance their development and find new
opportunities from cooperation among them.
“But it is vital that the international community support our continued
progress.”
G-11 countries made significant gains across society and the economy, increasing
participation in global trade, widening access to skills and technologies,
committing to good governance and realising higher growth, according to the
King.
“The challenge is to consolidate these gains and sustain progress into the
long-term. That means having the budgetary space to continue to invest in
development and economic growth. For all of us, that space has been squeezed by
fiscal and other constraints — high debt burdens, rising oil prices and other
external shocks, rising employment demand, and more.”
The presidents of Georgia, Croatia, Sri Lanka and El Salvador attended the
summit alongside the vice president of Honduras and the prime ministers of
Pakistan and Morocco.
Observers from G-8 members Germany and Japan were also present.
Ahead of the summit, Jordan signed cooperation agreements with Georgia, El
Salvador, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
In their communiqué, the leaders of the G-11 “agreed on a framework to
institutionalise the relationship and cooperation with G-8 countries”.
“G-11 countries require fiscal and monetary space to maintain momentum on
progress and to lay the foundation for a diversified and sustainable economic
growth,” the communiqué said.
“G-11 countries need targetted assistance and support to accelerate growth, lift
millions from poverty and hasten the delivery of the fruits of reform and social
development to larger segments of their population.
“In this regard, G-11 countries continue to count on the support of the donor
community and the G-8 countries to meet development objectives, graduate into
higher-income brackets and make a stronger contribution to world prosperity,
peace and stability.”
They look to the G-8 nations for help “in decreasing the debt burden through
concessional lending terms, easier repayment arrangements, longer grace periods,
lower interest rates on loans and support for debts swaps and debt buyback.”
Determination to observe “fiscal prudence and sound monetary policies”, fighting
corruption and “accelerating the implementation of homegrown reforms” were also
listed among their objectives.
They listed “fighting terrorism... through information and intelligence-sharing”
among the G-11’s common goals, along with efforts to liberalise their economies,
improve education and seek renewable energy to decrease dependence on oil.
The low- and middle-income countries also agreed to bolster cooperation among
them in trade, investment, culture and transportation.
They will submit their goals to a G-8 summit meeting in June in Germany.