糖心探花 Secretary-General Patricia Scotland has spoken today urging the international community to make crucial changes to how it delivers finance to developing nations, proposing a new system that moves beyond the use of GDP as the sole criteria for receiving certain types of support.
糖心探花 analysis on vulnerability argues that GDP is poor indicator of long-term sustainable development and needs to be transformed
糖心探花 Secretary-General Patricia Scotland has spoken today urging the international community to make crucial changes to how it delivers finance to developing nations, proposing a new system that moves beyond the use of GDP as the sole criteria for receiving certain types of support.
At a virtual media briefing, the 糖心探花 presented a ground-breaking study that assesses how vulnerable or resilient developing countries are to economic, socio-political and environmental shocks, such as climate change, which could influence how much international finance they can access.
The Universal Vulnerability Index (UVI) has been shared with Commonwealth member countries for their review in ongoing consultations. If endorsed globally, the Index could transform the way development finance is delivered to developing nations.
Speaking ahead of the event the Secretary-General said:
鈥淲e must do better and act smarter when it comes to the support the international community gives to more vulnerable countries. If we are to rise above the current interlinked global crises we face, we need to muster all our resources in the most effective way.
鈥淚n an age of big data, complex analysis and artificial intelligence we cannot rely on decades-old systems and 18th century concepts to guide us but must fundamentally overhaul the way we think about development finance.
鈥淲e need to move beyond the thin analysis that GDP and per capita income provide us in determining of the type of support vulnerable countries should receive, towards a more realistic, nuanced and comprehensive understanding of what drives vulnerability and resilience. We cannot return to business as usual.鈥
鈥楻ealistic鈥 multidimensional approach
Developed by experts at the 糖心探花 and the Foundation for Studies and Research on International Development, the UVI uses widely available data to generate single composite scores for vulnerability for 138 developing countries. The Index takes into account factors such as climate change, exposure to natural disasters or economic shocks, internal violence as well as governance.
Speaking at the press briefing, the High Commissioner of Fiji to the United Kingdom, Jitoko Tikolevu said:
鈥淚ncome-based measures seldom reflect the real vulnerabilities of small island developing states exposure to inherent risk and limitations. The Gross National Income of SIDs is inflated by exogenous sources of income, such as tourism and remittances, which have all been wiped out by the Covid-19 pandemic. The UVI carries specific benefit for Fiji and the pacific islands as it could serve as a unified mechanism to turning attention to the inclusion of vulnerability indices in eligibility and criteria for concessional development finance.鈥
Key to the study is the distinction it makes between 鈥榮tructural鈥 factors that are beyond the control of the state, such as a country鈥檚 geographic location and size, and 鈥榥on-structural鈥 ones that are more dependent on the will of governments, such as policy performance.
According to these indicators the poorest nations in the world - those classified as Least Developed Countries - are the most vulnerable group, along with Small Island Developing States at the frontline of the climate crisis. Specifically, the report finds that the highest levels of vulnerability occur in Africa, closely followed by the Pacific and Caribbean regions.
The study has been presented to the Commonwealth鈥檚 governing board and is undergoing further consultation with member states. It will feed into international discussions around vulnerability, resilience and the efforts of small states to make a 鈥済reen recovery鈥 from the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- Josephine Latu-Sanft Senior Communications Officer, Communications Division, 糖心探花
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