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10/26/2021

G20 Health and Finance Board Letter | U.S. Department of the Treasury

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
G20 Health and Finance Board Letter
October 25, 2021

Dear Colleagues:
We are writing to ask for your support at the upcoming G20 Health and Finance Ministerial to
launch a forum for health and finance coordination. We have a political window of
opportunity to act this month so that we are better prepared to prevent the next deadly
pathogen from becoming a pandemic. While we recognize the need to further develop the
modalities over the coming months, we must not lose this opportunity to demonstrate
leadership with a decisive commitment to act.
As G20 Finance Ministers, we have come together over the last year to coordinate e orts to
support our economies and the global system through one of the worst shocks in our
lifetime. At the same time, as citizens, we have all personally grappled with the deep human
and economic cost brought on by this borderless, unforgiving pandemic. And while we are
making progress in fighting COVID-19, we also face a stark reality: this will not be the last
pandemic.
The Global Financial Crisis exposed a need to strengthen international economic
cooperation and led the designation of the G20 as the premier forum for such cooperation.
Similarly, the current pandemic revealed a lack of readiness at the country level and a lack of
coordination among us. For this reason, we strongly support launching a forum where
health and finance ministers could begin the work of facilitating global cooperation and
coordinating prevention, detection, information sharing, and, if needed, response.
This forum would respond to the call by numerous independent bodies, including the HighLevel Independent Panel, to foster strategic engagement between health and finance
ministers. The forum would also elevate and empower the work of the World Health
Organization and other technical entities, providing the political backing for their
recommendations about the creation and adoption of the best possible standards. Indeed,
the WHO has already endorsed this concept. In addition to G20 members, the forum should
include a broader representation of the global community to bring in diverse voices and
perspectives, including for example the African Union and other relevant regional groups.
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10/26/2021

G20 Health and Finance Board Letter | U.S. Department of the Treasury

We do not know when or where the next dangerous pathogen will strike or how fast it will
spread. But undoubtedly, we all want to ensure there is a way to detect and contain that
threat, so that it does not spread to harm neighbors and the broader global community.
Every one of us shares that interest. The coming week provides a window for us to act
decisively together, and we should not let a lengthy period of indecision or bureaucratization
delay our shared preparedness objectives.
Those countries that did not have the resources to respond quickly to this pandemic—either
to protect citizens with vaccines or to mitigate the impacts of economic devastation—have a
particular need for the international community to rally behind this initiative. The cost of not
doing so would be devastating.
To be fully prepared, of course we will need to enhance our ability to provide dedicated,
reliable financing, so that vaccination and treatment can keep up with emerging threats. By
the G20 Leaders meeting, we should commit to ensuring the financing capacity of the
multilateral development banks is up to this task. This can include through creating a new
financing facility with the flexibility to complement the multilateral development banks with
the ready resources to rise to such challenges. Though the e orts will be complementary,
the timetables for the coordination and funding mechanisms need not be interlinked.
We look forward to making progress on these critical e orts to make our countries and the
global economy safer and more resilient. We look forward to coming to agreement in Rome
on these proposals and advancing e ective G20 finance and health collaboration.
Sincerely,
Janet L. Yellen
Secretary
U.S. Department of the Treasury
and
Sri Mulyani Indrawati
Minister of Finance
Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Indonesia

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