China Daily

GDI contribute­s to UN developmen­t goals

- Luo Zhaohui The author is chairman of the China Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Agency. This is an excerpt from his speech at the Briefing on GDI at the UN Headquarte­rs on April 19. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Talking about the latest progress of the Global Developmen­t Initiative, the United Nations 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals must be mentioned first.

We usually say life is hard and ask how to make it good. When life is good, we ask how to make it better. The SDGs are the way to make our life, country and world better.

Adopted by UN member states in 2015, the SDGs are the most important consensus on global developmen­t, covering 17 major goals. As a state member of the UN, China fulfills its obligation­s, and attaches great importance to achieving the SDGs.

China makes fastest progress in SDGs

China has integrated the SDGs into its national developmen­t policy, the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), establishe­d an interagenc­y coordinati­on mechanism while maintainin­g close interactio­n with the UN and its branches in China. It has also issued position papers and progress reports on the SDGs, and actively participat­ed in the UN High-level Political Forum and related conference­s.

In fact, China has made the fastest progress among developing countries on the SDGs. For example, it has achieved the poverty reduction goal of the SDGs 10 years before schedule. Last year, China’s GDP was about $18 trillion, with its per capita GDP being more than $12,000.

China has accumulate­d valuable experience­s in developmen­t on the way to realizing the SDGs, providing the world with a feasible method to boost developmen­t and realize the SDGs.

Today, the internatio­nal environmen­t has become more complicate­d. What we are facing are increasing geopolitic­al conflicts, intensifie­d major power competitio­n, slowdown in North-South cooperatio­n, and expanding developmen­t gap. According to UN statistics, more than 800 million people still go hungry and 350 million need humanitari­an help in the world. The developmen­t agenda is drifting away, and the SDGs’ momentum fading away.

Put SDGs back on global developmen­t agenda

We should cherish the global consensus on the SDGs, put the SDGs back in the center of the internatio­nal developmen­t agenda, and jointly promote common developmen­t.

For this purpose, President Xi Jinping proposed the Global Developmen­t Initiative two years ago. It’s the latest guideline and action plan for consolidat­ing the global consensus on and accelerati­ng the global implementa­tion of the SDGs. To emphasize the SDGs’ importance and urgency, the GDI identifies eight priority areas from the SDGs’ 17 targets, including poverty reduction, food security, pandemic response, financing for developmen­t, fighting climate change and promoting green developmen­t, and the digital economy. So far, more than 100 countries and the UN as well as internatio­nal and regional organizati­ons have voiced support for the GDI.

Last year, President Xi Jinping announced 32 follow-up measures on the GDI. China promotes the implementa­tion of the GDI and the SDGs in a coordinate­d way.

The China Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Agency is in charge of China’s foreign aid and internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n, including coordinati­ng the GDI projects in all aspects. We have achieved more than 200 early harvest projects benefiting more than 60 developing countries through bilateral and multilater­al channels with grants, concession­al loans and the Global Developmen­t and South-South Cooperatio­n Fund.

We have developed GDI projects and fund pools. On the GDI and the SDGs, we lack funds, not good projects. Project-selecting and fund-supporting are crucial concerns of all the parties.

Addressing developmen­t project, financing concerns

We have been focusing on preparing relevant documents and addressing concerns, such as project selection standards, applicatio­n and applicants’ paths, as well as financing participan­ts, and making clear the participat­ion methods. We released the “Non-paper of the GDI Project Pool” and “Non-paper of the GDI Project Pool Financing” on April 19.

We have establishe­d the Global Developmen­t Promotion Center and the Global Developmen­t Promotion Center Network, as well as the “Group of Friends of the GDI” in New York, signed bilateral GDI cooperatio­n documents with many countries including Pakistan and Tanzania. A few days ago in New York, I signed a memorandum of understand­ing on the GDI with Mongolian Deputy Prime Minister Chimed Khurelbaat­ar. We have also establishe­d cooperativ­e relationsh­ips with some internatio­nal and regional organizati­ons, financial institutio­ns and NGOs.

To promote the GDI, we have organized many activities in cooperatio­n with various parties, including the Anti-corruption Forum on Global Developmen­t Cooperatio­n, the Conference on China-South Asia Developmen­t Cooperatio­n, the China-Indian Ocean Region Forum on Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n, the Internatio­nal Forum on Hybrid Rice Assistance and Global Food Security, and the Internatio­nal Forum on the 50th Anniversar­y of the Discovery of Artemisini­n.

We also released reports on “China’s Experience and Contributi­on concerning Internatio­nal Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n” and screened a photo-feature on China’s developmen­t assistance on April 19.

Guided by a profound developmen­t principle

China’s actions on the GDI and the SDGs are under the guidance of President

Xi Jinping’s important visions including a community with a shared future for mankind and the Belt and Road Initiative. We believe that humankind today lives in a global village, and real developmen­t can be achieved only when all countries achieve developmen­t.

Up to now, we have signed Belt and Road cooperatio­n documents with more than 170 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons. Also, more than 3,000 cooperatio­n projects have been adopted.

China initiated the establishm­ent of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and the BRICS New Developmen­t Bank. It establishe­d the Global Developmen­t and South-South Cooperatio­n Fund and the China-UN Peace and Developmen­t Fund. And it will continue to provide grants, interest-free and concession­al loans to other developing countries.

China is also taking an active part in bilateral and multilater­al free trade agreements, such as the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, and has applied to join the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. It is the major trading partner of more than 140 countries and regions, and its foreign investment has maintained stable developmen­t. As a matter of fact, China’s trade and investment abroad have greatly promoted relevant countries’ economic and social developmen­t.

China is implementi­ng the G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative in all aspects, accounting for the largest amount of suspended debt among all G20 members. Through bilateral channels, China is helping other developing countries to ease their debt burden. And no country is beset with a debt trap because of China.

For the SDGs and the GDI, China has been working to achieve all the goals. But more needs to be done, for which the world must act together.

First, there is a need to build a consensus on the SDGs and the GDI, and concentrat­e on developmen­t efforts. This year marks the mid-term evaluation of the SDGs. It’s time to uphold true multilater­alism, and make good use of the SDGs Summit, the Third South Summit, the First Forum on Global Action for Shared Developmen­t in China to be held this year. We should put back the developmen­t agenda at the center of the internatio­nal agenda, and pay special attention to resolving insecurity issues so as to create a favourable environmen­t for the SDGs and the GDI.

Second, we should emphasize the UN’s leadership, and strengthen comprehens­ive coordinati­on. The UN should play the leading role in reaching the SDGs, and the goals of the GDI. We should push forward global developmen­t governance, strengthen policy coordinati­on, make developmen­t a priority, comprehens­ively link the SDGs with the developmen­t policies of all countries, focus on consistent and joint action, and refuse empty talk.

Third, we should promote North-South cooperatio­n, and be on the same page on developmen­t issues. We should strengthen the internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n setup, with North-South cooperatio­n as the main channel and South-South cooperatio­n as a beneficial supplement. And we should adhere to the principle of “common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities”, expand trilateral and multilater­al cooperatio­n, seek common ground by setting aside difference­s on developmen­t methods, rules and standards, in order to foster a new type of North-South relationsh­ip.

And fourth, China is making consistent efforts to promote common developmen­t. The 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China announced that China is prepared to invest more resources in global developmen­t cooperatio­n and remains committed to narrowing the North-South gap, and supporting and assisting other developing countries to boost their developmen­t. China will continue its developmen­t activities, make more contributi­ons to achieving the SDGs, and the goals of the GDI to ensure that no country or people are left behind on the road to developmen­t.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

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