2004 Press Releases
Globalization and Achieving Lasting Development
September 30, 2004
By Alan P.Larson,
United States Under Secretary of State
For Economic, Business and Agricultural Affairs
The
World Bank and International Monetary Fund hold their annual meetings
on October 2-3. As that gathering discusses globalization and
development, I hope it will be with a clear recognition that it is
private enterprise that is the basic engine to both.
The United
States' approach to development reflects our nation's basic values, a
generous heart combined with a hard-headed demand for results. We see
private initiative from businesses and families as prime movers in any
nation's advancement and welcome the fact that entrepreneurship,
personal responsibility and property rights are taking their rightful
place in the venerable body of development ideals. As the UN's recent
report "Unleashing Entrepreneurship" makes clear, private sector
resources can make powerful contributions to development.
Take
remittances - the hard-earned money that foreign workers send back to
their families in developing countries. These amount to roughly $90
billion annually. Beyond helping families put food on their tables,
this money goes a long way toward helping everyday people build houses,
start businesses, and even hire workers.
Another example is
foreign direct investment, a flow that the Institute of International
Finance forecast at $225 billion this year. It is an especially
powerful development tool because it spurs economic growth and
development by transferring knowledge and technology, creating jobs,
boosting productivity, enhancing competitiveness and stimulating
entrepreneurship.
Domestic savings in the developing world is a
far greater source of development finance, estimated at more than $2
trillion a year. As countries put in place policies and institutions
that encourage domestic investment, these savings can support rising
income, productivity, and jobs.
And then there is trade. Time
and again, trade has proven to be a powerful engine for progress in
emerging economies. Time and again, countries that embrace trade find
themselves moving onto a faster growth path and converging with the
developed world. And also, time and again the United States has been at
the center of the effort to promote free and unfettered trade. The U.S.
is the top importer of goods from developing countries, importing $680
billion last year -- more than 10 times greater than all ODA to
developing countries from all donors.
But there is still more
work to be done. A World Bank study estimates that a successful
conclusion of the Doha negotiations could lift more than 140 million
people out of poverty and add $350 billion annually to developing
country incomes. The July Geneva WTO framework agreement presents a
unique opportunity to move ahead on a final package that will open
markets for trade -especially in agriculture - around the world. For
this reason all institutions and governments must press ahead to a
successful conclusion of the Doha round.
At the March 2002 UN
Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico, world
leaders recognized that the best hope for the developing world to
achieve its potential is for each country to take primary
responsibility for its own development. The Millennium Challenge
Account or MCA, is the American response to this challenge. The MCA
provides grants to countries that govern justly, invest in their
people, and promote economic freedom to encourage all developing
countries to adopt sound economic and social policies.
The MCA
is a common sense idea that draws on lessons learned about development
over the past 50 years. In its five months of operation, the MCA has
selected 16 partner countries that are reaching out to their citizens
and putting forward innovative ideas for how to overcome their greatest
growth and development hurdles.
With strong bipartisan support,
Congress authorized the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) to
administer the MCA and provided $1 billion in initial funding for FY04.
The President has requested $2.5 billion for the MCA for the coming
fiscal year. From 2006 on, the President intends to ask Congress to
appropriate it $5 billion annually - an amount that is in addition to
an assistance budget that was already 50% above its 2001 level in 2003.
MCA, combined with the President's HIV/AIDS initiative -committing $15
billion over five years - and growth in our traditional development
assistance budget puts us on track to increase our overall assistance
levels in 2006 by 75%.
Debt reduction for the poorest countries
is a priority of our development strategy. Under the enhanced Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative, 27 countries have had their
debt burden reduced by two thirds -some $32 billion in present value
terms, enabling them to increase their spending on poverty reduction.
Moreover, the United States goes beyond the generous parameters of this
multilateral program and forgives 100 percent of the debt these
countries owe us.
But despite all this progress, we recognize
that some countries still face unsustainable debt burdens. That's why
G-8 leaders at Sea Island this summer agreed to work toward extending
the HIPC initiative for two more years and to consider other measures
to help the poorest countries address their debt sustainability.
Eradicating
poverty is an expression of our nation's deep humanitarian impulse. It
reflects a recognition that our own well-being depends on the
well-being of fellow human beings. Bringing all of the world's poor
into an expanding circle of opportunity is vital to raising hope,
improving peoples' lives, and creating a more secure, democratic, and
prosperous world. Do this, and we will have made a lasting mark toward
turning the corner on poverty.