Title: Financing sustainable human development: preliminary, random, and provocative reflections
1Financing sustainable human development
preliminary, random, and provocative reflections
- Gabriele Köhler
- Stockholm School of Economics
- Riga, 21 October 2002
2The scene
- All Governments and agencies are rallying around
sustainable human development (SHD) and the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
3The dilemma
- My contention somewhat exaggerated, so as to
overcome complacency - We have a post-modern, agnostic,
non-committal consensus - In truth, we are skirting the issue - how to
finance these goals? - There are competing demands that require painful
choices - within the status quo there are limited means.
4The obvious financing needs
- Income poverty and inequality
- Public expenditure needs in each country
- Global public goods
5For examplePersonal income inequality
Source UNDP, Human Development Report 2002
6Public spending needs
- Economic infrastructure prerequisite to economic
development/growth. - Transport and communications (in the IT sense)
- High tech and pioneer RD
- Industrial parks incubators
- Social infrastructure
- Education for all levels of skills for lifelong
learning - Health as a human right and as a prerequisite to
productivity
7And now The millennium challenge
- Sustainable human development (SHD)
- a notion championed by UNDP in its
- Human Development Reports
- Operationalised in 2000 as the millennium
development goals (MDGs)
8The Millennium development movement
- MDGs now accepted
- First by Summit of World Leaders
- UN General Assembly 2002
- Adapted by agencies
- UN
- UNDP. UNDP as lead agency for this.
- Since Monterrey Conference on Financing for
Development and 2002 Development Committee - Accepted by IFI as well as by business
9 THE 8 UN MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
- Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Achieve universal primary education
- Promote gender equality and empower women
- Reduce child mortality
- Improve maternal health
- Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases
- Ensure environmental sustainability
- Develop a global partnership for development
10The costs of meeting the MDGs
- Minimum Estimates range between US 40-60
billion a year in additional aid (World Bank,
UNESCO, World Health Organization) - Some estimates go up to US 100 billion per
year- this is less than 1 of the global annual
income but double current ODA flows - Cost estimates depend in part on the efficacy of
countries domestic policies
11Â Â Rough estimates of additional aid finance
requiredUS billion annuallyminimum estimates
by issues
- Â Â Halving poverty and hunger......................
....................................20 - Halving population without access to safe
drinking water.............0 - Achieving universal primary education...........
..............................9 - Achieving gender equality in primary
education...........................3 - Achieving three-fourths decline in maternal
mortality...................n/a - Achieving two-thirds decline in under-five
mortality......................n/a - Halting and reversing HIV/AIDS..................
.................................7-10 - Providing special assistance to AIDS
orphans.............................n/a - Improving lives of 100 million slum dwellers
................................4 - Total cost
50 - Source Zedillo Report, Financing for Development
Summit, Monterrey, 2002 - n/a indicates no estimate available and the
total includes allowance for these headings Â
12An excursion financing development - historys
see-saw
- Bretton Woods Institutions and UN in 1944/5
- halfhearted attention to social expenditure
- 1st UN development decade (1960s) recognition
of the urgency of promoting capital flows to
developing countries - 1974 New international economic order
acknowledgement of need for global redistribution - Structural adjustment policies of the World Bank
in the 1980s no attention to social impact
13The changing discourse on financing development
the see-saw again
- UNICEFs critique of World Bank/IMF structural
adjustment policies (late 1980s) - UNDP Human Development Reports (since 1990) need
to monitor human - social - progress - 20/20 decisions of the World Social Summit
1995 - 20 of ODA and 20 of domestic government
budget for - social expenditure
- The aim of the Summit was to move beyond a
conversation solely about aid and development
cooperation toward a broader discourse rooted in
the recognition that poverty, unemployment, and
social integration are shared challenges for rich
and poor countries alike. - Juan Somavia, spiritus rector of the Social
Summit
14And the see-saw againReal world constraints in
the 1990s
- Real economy fear the twin deficit pandemic
- Ideology Austerity fixation - the triumph of
neoclassical economics in the 1980s - Real politics I pressure from the international
lending agencies for poor countries to be prudent - Real politics II rich countries facing economic
decline resistance to ODA tax resistance - Real politics III Maastricht criteria on EC
members budget deficit ceilings (max 3 of
GDP)
declared choice for fiscal austerity
15But just now stupid Maastricht criteriathe
see-saw again?
- Romano Prodi, president of the European
Commission, has remarked that the economic rules
underpinning Europe's single currency the
Maastricht criteria - Â are "stupid". - His arguments are
- the pact should be applied intelligently
- it should take account of the economic realities
of our economies - rigidities are stupid.
- (based on Financial Times 18 and 19/20 Oct 2002)
16(No Transcript)
17What are the options?
- At the level of individual countries and
- Internationally
18 Finding resources in the government budget the
options
- raising revenues
- improving efficiency of the expenditure without
changing its composition - shifting spending from military and other
non-productive areas to social expenditure - deficit spending
- shifting the financial burden to the future
- AND stimulating demand, hence raising future
revenue
19Government Commitments to Human Development, some
examples
20 Finding resources in the macro-economy and
internationally the options
- Increasing trade revenues
- Foreign direct investment (FDI)
- Official development assistance (ODA)
- Domestic and external loans
21UNDP, Human Development Report 2002
22??? ??????? Some tactics
- Instrumentalising the MDGs to pressurise
governments and donors - Mobilise pressure groups
- Mobilise business
- Find creative sources of finance
- Change public discourse and blinkered thinking
23Creative solutions one idea
- Creating a new international tax base? For
example Tobin Tax on currency trade or capital
movements, airfares, gasoline - Tax of 0.1 capital gains would result in an
estimated 100 - 300 billion of additional
yearly revenue
24Outlook
- The UN must help define a consensus in the social
field - that investment in people is not a cost to
society but one of its most remunerative
investments - that equity and social justice do not hamper
growth but stimulate it that equality of
opportunity is a human right and not a concession
to be dispensed by the powerful and - that the state and the market are both essential
to address social needs. - Juan Somavia, ILO
- Â