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Heads of agencies renew support for trade as best
way out of poverty. GLOBAL PROGRAMME ONLINE
NEWS, GENEVA, 26 June 2002
The heads of four UN
agencies working in the field of trade and development yesterday renewed
their support for trade as the best way to tackle world poverty.
Speaking at a specially convened session of the UNDP Executive
Board in Geneva, Mark Malloch-Brown of UNDP, Mike Moore of WTO, Carlos
Fortin of UNCTAD and J. Denis B lisle of ITC called for more funding and
collaboration for enabling countries to integrate better into the global
trading system.
At the heart of this is the Integrated Framework,
which seeks to mainstream trade in national development strategies and
Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers. In order to streamline the process, the
WTO is establishing a database of all trade-related technical assistance
programme carried out by the participating agencies.
Among the
issues discussed at the meeting were the need to increase training
programmes for trade diplomacy, which is currently being addressed through
courses at the universities of Nairobi and Casablanca, and a need for
stronger links between trade negotiators and productive sectors through
private-public partnerships.
The difficulties faced by LDCs, both
at home and at the international level, in integrating into the global
economy, were also discussed, as well as policies aimed at increasing
market access and reaching a fair price for commodities, which still form
a large part of many LDCs' exports. Mr. Fortin, stated his preference for
growth over redistribution in tackling poverty.
Mr. Moore
highlighted the need for an increase in market access for developed and
developing countries, to increase the size of the world economy and
pointed out that tariff structures were unfairly skewed against the
interests of textile-exporting countries. And at a question and answer
session afterwards, he accepted that efforts at aimed at helping
small-island, land-locked and least-developed countries to participate
more actively at the WTO would always be hampered both by national
capacities and the funding the body receives.
The heads of UNCTAD
and UNDP also took the opportunity to reaffirm their support for
collaboration in trade and sustainable development through the joint
framework of the UNCTAD/UNDP Global Programme, established by the two
organisations in 1998.
For more information please
contact georges.chapelier@unctad.org.
Click here to go to
the meeting page.
Click here to go to the main news
page.
© United Nations 2001
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