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5/5/2020

Op-Ed: Lew, Ahmed and Videgaray Caso on Financing for Development Conference

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Op-Ed: Lew, Ahmed and Videgaray Caso on Financing for Development Conference
7/13/2015

WASHINGTON – In an op-ed published today in The Guardian, Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew, Ethiopia Minister of Finance and
Economic Development Sufian Ahmed and Mexico Secretary of Finance and Public Credit Luis Videgaray Caso write about the upcoming
Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, which they are participating in this week.
Read the piece online.
The full text of the op-ed follows:
Global Development - and Global Team Work - Are Key to Humanity's Prosperity
By Jacob J. Lew, Luis Videgaray Caso and Sufian Ahmed
The past 15 years have yielded unprecedented gains in the fight against extreme poverty and hunger, with emerging economies heralding
record economic growth.
The number of people living in extreme poverty is half of what it was in 1990, as is the proportion of people without access to safe drinking
water. More than 3m deaths from malaria have been averted since 2000. Women’s labor force participation has jumped significantly. And
technological innovations – led by the increasingly ubiquitous mobile phone – have brought dramatic economic, social and financial
opportunities to remote parts of the world.
Yet the progress achieved is not nearly enough. Poverty – including extreme poverty – is pervasive. One in seven people in the world still
survive on $1.25 a day or less. Dramatic levels of inequality persist, impairing growth in some countries. And there is no guarantee that the
gains made in recent years will be permanent. Climate change, civil unrest and terrorism can rapidly undo hard-earned progress even as
demands increase: people around the world rightly want more than access to basic services – they want an equal shot at opportunities to
thrive, not merely to survive.
This week, we will convene with other ministers, the private sector and civil society in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for the Third International
Conference on Financing for Development. This year’s conference represents a unique opportunity to protect, enhance and even
accelerate the gains of the last 15 years. We are determined to seize the opportunity.
Reducing the risks of climate change, promoting resilient infrastructure and boosting productivity will help us to protect these gains, as will
empowering and including every citizen in order to contribute productively to economic growth, and tackling inequality and unemployment
to offer hope and opportunities to both women and youth. Ensuring that everyone can share in the benefits of economic growth will help us
to enhance those gains. And making critical investments in science, technology and innovation can help accelerate them. All the while, it is
vital that there be improved transparency, a sounder business climate and an end to corruption. Together, those goals represent the key to
sustainable development.
The First International Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico, in 2002 set this foundation. The Monterrey
Consensus – the outcome of that first meeting – emphasized that every nation has primary responsibility for its own economic and social
development. This year’s conference presents the next chapter, providing a platform from which to implement the United Nations Post2015 Sustainable Development Goals, that will be agreed upon in September, setting an ambitious new stage following the Millennium
Development Goals.
The new chapter of Financing for Development goes much further. It moves away from merely managing poverty and toward spurring
transformation. That requires three primary sources of development finance: donor assistance, domestic resources and private
investment.
Donor assistance plays a critical role, particularly in the most vulnerable countries, helping to disseminate knowledge and best practices
and reaching sectors often shut off from other sources of finance. But it must be used as a catalyst for attracting other financial flows to
support economic growth, including domestic resources and private investment. Increasing domestic public resources is vital for
governments’ ownership of their own development while private investment is critical to job creation and infrastructure development.
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Op-Ed: Lew, Ahmed and Videgaray Caso on Financing for Development Conference

To maximize the impact of money spent on development, we also must do more to incorporate key enablers of development – including
making better use of science, technology and innovation. Data, for example, is key to generating new development solutions and driving
evidence-based policy making. Similarly, we must recognize that climate change impacts all aspects of development – social, economic
and environmental. Together, we must redouble our efforts to build a low-carbon, climate-resilient world.
We are committed to working together and urge others to join us in seeking to revitalize a partnership for sustainable development – a
partnership that, for the first time, can be built on a shared and universal agenda for change. We live in an increasingly interconnected
world where our prosperity, peace and security are linked. That is why Financing for Development holds such promise as we work to
translate this exciting new vision into concrete actions and commitments for years and decades to come.
Jacob J. Lew is the U.S. Treasury Secretary, Luis Videgaray Caso is the Secretary of Mexico’s Department of Finance and Public Credit
and Sufian Ahmed is the Minister of Ethiopia’s Department of Finance and Economic Development.
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