In the last decade,
the world has experienced significant, although uneven, economic
growth and a decisive contribution by developing countries.
Globalization has played an important role as a dynamic force for
growth. However, its impact has left us with a world beset by acute
economic and social inequalities. The marginalization of a large
number of developing countries, especially in Africa, calls for
intensified international co-operative efforts, international policy
coherence and co-ordination, and faithful implementation of the
outcomes of major Summits, especially the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs).
2. Development is a right, central to people’s progress and critical
to the eradication of poverty, fostering peace, stability and
security of all nations. The MDGs constitute an internationally
agreed benchmark according to which we will measure our efforts to
advance sustainable development and eradicate poverty. We are
committed to working with our partners to advance the development
agenda and the eradication of poverty. We believe that eradication
of poverty in the world is not only an issue of importance to
developing countries, but also a matter of our collective global
interest.
3. We are meeting with the G8 to consider and assess critical
matters of global importance at a time when there is optimism
regarding the performance of the world economy. We are, therefore,
concerned to ensure that the benefits of global growth are equitably
distributed to make a meaningful impact on poverty eradication. In
this context, in addition to the topics to be examined at the G8
Summit in Heiligendamm, we wish to call attention to matters of
global governance, trade, migration, climate change and South-South
co-operation, which constitute critical interventions in our efforts
to eradicate poverty.
4. Achieving tangible
progress on these matters hinges on the provision of adequate
financial resources, effective policies and measures and enhanced
international cooperation. Experience of the last two decades with
development policies has demonstrated that there can be no
“one-size-fits-all” approach to development and that, strategies
work effectively when tailored to the national circumstances.
5. We recognize that a supportive and an enabling global policy
environment, based on principles of equality, mutual respect, equity
and justice, constitute a positive framework for international
co-operation.
Global Governance
6. We reiterate the need to make the structures of global governance
more democratic, representative and legitimate by increasing the
participation of developing countries in the decision-making bodies
of multilateral institutions. This is in line with discussions held
at the UN World Summit in 2005. Priority should be given to the
reform of the United Nations and its Security Council to make them
more responsive to the needs and interests of developing countries,
as well as to enhance international peace and security. Reform of
the international financial architecture, especially enhancing the
voice and participation of developing countries in the Bretton Woods
Institutions, is also necessary.
7. Strengthening
democratic governance implies a permanent endeavor to combat
corruption in all its forms and in all countries, developed and
developing ones alike. It also requires that efforts to improve the
quality of public sector management are coupled with measures to
stimulate greater corporate responsibility, transparency and
accountability. Partnership between public and private sectors in
social areas might be especially fruitful to promote new and
innovative ways to promote social inclusion to tackle poverty.
8. Terrorism cannot be justified on any ground. The efforts of the
international community to fight terrorism should be strengthened
and conducted in accordance with international law, in particular
human rights law, refugee law and international humanitarian law,
and should avoid double standards. We stress the importance to take
urgent action to prevent and combat terrorism in all its forms and
manifestations and to implement the Global Strategy of the United
Nations against Terrorism. In this context, States should consider
becoming parties without delay to the existing international
conventions and protocols against terrorism, and implementing them,
and to make every effort to reach an agreement on and conclude the
Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism. Measures should
be taken to pursue and reinforce development agendas and social
inclusion to reduce youth unemployment and marginalisation so that
they may not be exploited. We reaffirm our commitment to ensure the
timely and full realisation of MDGs, to eradicate poverty and
promote sustained economic growth, sustainable development and
global prosperity for all.
9. Security and
development are interlinked and mutually reinforcing. Poverty and
underdevelopment greatly increase the risk of instability and
violence. Similarly, conflicts and war undoubtedly set back
development.
10. We stress the need to build a truly global partnership for
development as set out in the 8th Millennium Development Goal, the
Monterrey Consensus and the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation.
These efforts should address the eradication of poverty and hunger
as a top priority. In this respect, it is extremely important that
countries maintain the ownership of their development strategies and
that they are not abandoned on the grounds of institutional
weakness.
International Trade
11. Global trade plays a relevant role in fostering economic
development and fighting poverty. Nevertheless, international trade
continues to face important barriers and distortions particularly in
the agricultural sector, which affect the overall efforts of
developing countries to enhance the well-being of their societies.
12. We consider necessary that the major trade partners reaffirm
their commitments to achieve the necessary agreements, so as to
conclude the negotiations of the Doha Development Agenda. The
successful conclusion of this process with an outcome that meets the
objectives embodied in the Doha mandate (the Doha Ministerial
Declaration complemented by the July 2004 Framework and the Hong
Kong Ministerial Declaration) will bring developing countries, and
particularly to the least developed ones, newer and better benefits
from globalization that will contribute to consolidate their
economic development and to create the necessary domestic conditions
that will help in the profound battle against hunger and poverty.
13. Brazil, China,
India, Mexico and South Africa as members of the WTO Group of 20,
share the belief that the cornerstone of the current negotiations is
the agricultural sector, which is of utmost relevance for the
well-being of our most vulnerable population. In particular,
agreement has to be reached to eliminate trade distortions,
especially those derived from the limited access to the developed
countries markets as well as from the substantial and effective
reductions in trade-distorting domestic support and other forms of
internal support instrumented by the developed countries. Meaningful
and operable special and differential treatment, which includes
development instruments of Special Products and the Special
Safeguard Mechanism are vital to address the concerns of developing
countries with subsistence and low-income farmers. We are confident
that any progress towards achieving these aforementioned goals will
have a positive impact on the overall process of the Doha Round, in
particular in the NAMA and services negotiations.
14. We underline that a more open world economy takes into account
the promotion of financial flows, notably foreign direct investment,
in a way that contributes to the sustainability of development, the
transfer of avant-garde technology and the creation of decent
employment, all of which are tools for the definitive fight against
poverty.
15. We consider that it is time for the governments of the relevant
developed members of the WTO to express their political will to push
forward the negotiations.
International Migration
16. We acknowledge international migration as an important aspect of
globalization today, which demands objective, comprehensive,
balanced and multidimensional approaches.
17. We emphasize the
need of a new holistic and long-term framework for international
migration based on a deep and wide understanding of the phenomenon,
its causes and consequences, and its relationship with development,
human rights, and security.
18. A new culture on migration demands increased and effective
cooperation between sending, transit and receiving States and abided
by the following criteria: -
a) Migrants, as human beings, should be at the center of any
migratory programme or policy, including respect of their human
rights, regardless of their migratory status and should be
recognized as active contributors to development, as well as to the
economic, cultural and social spheres in countries of origin and
destination;
b) Policies and initiatives on migration should promote holistic and
long-term approaches that take into account the causes and
consequences of the phenomenon, as well as the full respect of the
human rights of migrants;
c) In today’s age of globalization, the importance of international
labor mobility needs to be recognized on the same level as movement
of goods and services. Negotiations under Mode 4 of GATS need to be
speeded up. Labor markets, however, should not be the sole reference
point in determining the kind and scope of migratory programmes or
policies;
d) Mutual benefit and mutual responsibility are fundamental to reach
balanced responses.
e) More and better
coordination and cooperation between sending, transit and receiving
States would lead to win-win situation for all;
f) We need to promote positive elements of migration, especially to
enhance its development benefits, while addressing the whole
spectrum of challenges related to it, particularly those of
irregular migration and its causes;
g) Promotion of enabling conditions for the participation of
migrants (Diaspora) in the development of their home countries;
h) Strengthening responses to the particular needs of migrant women,
through integration of a gender perspective in migration management
policies and strategies;
i) Combating trafficking and smuggling of migrants, including the
falsification of documents, without criminalizing migrants based
solely on their migratory status;
j) Eliminating all forms of violence, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and other forms of intolerance, inhuman and degrading
treatment against migrants and their families, through the promotion
of culture and education that values diversity; and
k) Promoting collaborative programmes in partnership with
multilateral organizations between and within the sending, transit
and receiving countries for capacity building, training and for
establishing best practices in reinforcing the benefits of
international migration and development.
19. We urge G8
countries to incorporate the above mentioned principles in the
discussions that take place in different international and regional
fora in order to find durable and comprehensive solutions that
emphasize the positive aspects and minimize the negative elements of
this global phenomenon, particularly in the upcoming Global Forum on
Migration and Development, which will be held in Brussels in July
2007. The countries should commit on making the Forum work as an
instrument for reaching political consensus on matters regarding
international migration.
Climate Change
20. Climate change is a global challenge with strong economic,
environmental and social dimensions. It impacts all countries, but
is particularly severe for developing countries, given their
vulnerabilities, inadequate means and limited capacities to adapt to
its effects. The recent reports of the IPCC have reaffirmed the need
for urgent action. We believe that at this critical juncture we all
should do more in accordance with our common but differentiated
responsibilities and respective capabilities. We also believe that
immediate and real effect must be given to commitments on
international cooperation in fighting climate change, especially in
the areas of adaptation, technology transfer, capacity building and
the development of the carbon market. This cooperation should be
framed by the need to address unsustainable patterns of production
and consumption.
21. Climate change is
a global phenomenon that requires an international response under
the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Any new
cooperative effort to tackle climate change should not undermine the
UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol, but rather complement these
instruments. GHG mitigation in developed countries is key to address
climate change given their responsibilities in causing it. Developed
countries must take the lead by making further truly significant
commitments at an early date for GHG reductions in the period beyond
2012. Early and significant commitments would give a long term and
strong signal to the private sector, including in its involvement in
climate related investments, and spur the carbon market. The Clean
Development Mechanism’s contribution to sustainable development and
transfer of clean technologies to developing countries would also be
enhanced significantly.
22. In order for developing countries to contribute to the efforts
to address climate change, access to adequate technology is a key
enabling condition. We need an agreement on transfer of technologies
at affordable costs for accelerated mitigation efforts in developing
countries, inter alia through increased use of renewable energy,
including biofuels, and enhanced energy efficiency. Rewards for
innovators needs to be balanced with common good for humankind. We
also consider it necessary and important to enhance developing
countries’ capacities to deploy mitigation and adaptation
technologies.
23. Many needed
technologies based on resource endowments of developing countries
(e.g. biomass, biofuels, clean coal) do not yet exist, or are too
expensive. Collaborative R&D between developing and developed
country R&D institutions can address this gap. Financing can be
through a Venture Capital Fund, located in a multilateral financial
institution, with the resulting IPRs being held by the Fund, and
deployed at concessional cost in developing countries. Additionally,
there could be collaborative R&D projects with sharing of IPRs by
the partner R&D institutions.
24. Resources required for adaptation are of magnitude order as
those for GHG mitigation. For this we should mobilize resources from
the entire carbon market, as is being done on a small scale from the
2% levy on the CDM proceeds. These resources are separate from the
provision of new and additional resources to tackle the challenges
of adapting to the adverse effects of climate change. Diversion of
ODA resources from economic growth and poverty alleviation in
developing countries for adaptation is not the answer as development
is a prerequisite for achieving effective adaptation.
South-South Cooperation
25. We reaffirm the role of South-South cooperation in the overall
context of multilateralism, as a continuing process vital to
confront the challenges faced by the South, in particular its role
as an important tool crucial for fostering and strengthening the
economic independence of developing countries and achieving
development as one of the means of ensuring the equitable global
economic order.
26. We welcome the
continued efforts by developing countries in furthering South-South
cooperation and its new dynamics as manifested by recent meetings
and initiatives such as South America-Arab Summit, China-Africa
Summit, the Puebla-Panama Plan, India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA)
Dialogue Forum, the New Africa-Asia Strategic Partnership (NAASP)
and the Third Round of Negotiations of the Global System of
Preferences among Developing Countries (GSTP).
27. We in order to expand both the strength and the scope of
South-South cooperation, undertake the resolve to:
i) Enhance policy coordination and high-level dialogue. The common
challenges shared by the developing countries are wide-ranging,
inter alia, MDGs and international development cooperation,
financing for development, market access in the global trading
system, an enhanced voice and participation of developing countries
in international financial institutions, fighting environmental
degradation and infectious diseases. We need to work together to
press for a favorable external environment and adequate policy space
for development. In the field of South-South cooperation, we have
both traditional mechanisms such as the G77 and new forms such as
the dialogue among our five developing countries, all of which are
playing a positive role in promoting South-South cooperation. We
support all such arrangements;
ii) Enrich
concrete cooperation in all fields. The growing strength of
developing countries has created a wealth of opportunities for
concrete South-South cooperation in such fields as trade,
investment, S&T, infrastructure, health and education, etc. Efforts
should be made to explore all forms of cooperation in all fields
based on the principles of effectiveness, ownership, equality,
complementarity and mutual-benefit; and
iii) Implement and follow up on the outcomes of major conferences on
South-South cooperation such as the Second South Summit held in
Doha. We call for a stable and regular dialogue mechanism and
necessary financial resources in this regard to make the South-South
cooperation more meaningful and effective.
28. We call for financial and institutional support from the
international community for South-South cooperation including in the
form of triangular cooperation.
29. We reiterate that South-South cooperation is complementary to
and not a substitute for North-South cooperation. We welcome the
convocation of the G8 Heiligendamm outreach session, which we hope
will help further strengthen North-South cooperation.
Berlin
June 8, 2007
Back