Møder hele ugen i Geneve om de fattige nationer og gælden

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After the recent agreement by eight nations (G8) to cancel 40 billion US dollar (244 milliarder DKR) in debt owed by 18 of the worlds poorest countries – 14 of them African – now follows UNCTADs Fifth Interregional Conference on Debt Management, to be held in Geneva from 20 to 24 June.

The conference will take place two weeks before the G-8 summit in Scotland at which debt relief and major increases in aid to Africa will be discussed. The Geneva meeting will focus on management of debt burdens, on the long-term sustainability of external debt, on the extent to which debt relief addresses or does not address development prospects in these countries, and on how much such nations should reasonably borrow.

The conference will include the third and final round of the multi-stakeholder consultations on “sovereign debt for sustained development” organized by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) as a follow-up to the Monterrey Consensus of 2002. See www.un.org/esa/ffd

Issues on the weeks agenda include relations between debtors and creditors; practical ways to contain risk and reduce uncertainty; information and transparency; relations between debt managers and policymakers; recent experiences in setting up national debt offices; the changing role of the debt manager; and debt crisis management.

Country “cases” will be reviewed, including those of Argentina, Iraq, Nigeria, Mexico and Panama. Ninety countries will be represented.

Speakers (or moderators) will include Iraqs Central Bank Governor, the heads of the Argentinean and Nigerian Debt Offices, the head of Mexicos Investor Relations (for the Ministry of Finance), the head of the African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD), the Paris Club Secretary-General, Jubilee Peru, Transparency International, as well as senior staff from the IMF and the World Bank dealing with debt issues.

No negotiated outcome will be sought, but a report of the multi-stakeholder consultations on debt will be submitted to the UN General Assembly, along with the results of other consultations in the series undertaken in 2004-2005.

An issues paper on sovereign debt for sustained development prepared by DESA in cooperation with UNCTAD, the IMF and the World Bank serves as a background paper for the consultations. This paper, the conference agenda, the list of participants and other relevant materials will be available on the website of UNCTADs Debt Management–DMFAS Programme, www.unctad.org/dmfas

Two other meetings on debt issues will take place at the end of the week.

That is the Fourth Meeting of the DMFAS advisory group on 23 June (Thursday), which will review the activities of UNCTADs Debt Management Programme (DMFAS) and the Fourth Conference and General Assembly of the World Association of Debt Management Offices (WADMO) on 24 June (Friday).

Kilde: www.runiceurope.org