Udenrigsudvalget 2014-15 (1. samling)
URU Alm.del Bilag 106
Offentligt
21 January 2015
Preparatory Process for the 3
rd
International Conference on Financing for Development
Elements
I.
O
VERVIEW
In September 2015, the international community will adopt the post-2015 development agenda,
including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This universal agenda will aspire to
transformative change to eradicate poverty and hunger and achieve economic growth and
transformation, while protecting the environment, ensuring peace and realizing human rights. Its
success will hinge on reaching an ambitious agreement on policies, financing, technology transfer,
capacity building and systemic issues at the Third International Conference on Financing for
Development (FfD) in Addis Ababa from 13-16 July 2015.
The financing needs for sustainable development are enormous. Estimates vary due to the
complexities of quantifying needs, but consistently point to a significant financing shortfall.
1
But
they can be met. Indeed, global public and private savings would be sufficient to meet the needs. Yet
it is clear that current financing and investment patterns will not deliver sustainable development.
The solution lies in an integrated policy framework that changes existing patterns, to mobilize and
effectively use all sources of finance – public and private, domestic and international. Only an effort
shared by all, at national, regional and international levels, will suffice to meet the SDGs and deliver
sustainable development.
The post-2015 development agenda will be implemented primarily at the national and subnational
level. Successful implementation will require an enabling domestic environment, including good
governance, sound economic policies, solid democratic institutions responsive to the needs of the
people, improved infrastructure, rule of law and national policy strategies that take account of the
inter-relations between the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable
development and that are adequately financed. To this end, the Secretary-General encouraged
countries to adopt national sustainable development financing strategies which would be integral
parts of their national sustainable development strategies (NSDS).
2
While countries are responsible for their own development, implementation of the post-2015 agenda
will require partnerships between a broad range of relevant stakeholders, leveraging their resources
and unique skills and advantages. Countries efforts’ will need to be supported by coherent and
mutually supporting world trade, monetary and financial systems, better processes to globally
develop and share appropriate technologies, capacity building, a balanced approach to sovereign debt
distress and strengthened global economic governance. We need a renewed and strengthened global
partnership for sustainable development, which provides a global framework within which countries
can situate national financing strategies.
The effort to forge a stronger global partnership should build on the full compact of policy
commitments expressed in the Monterrey Consensus and the Doha Declaration, which remain
relevant in their entirety. It should build on the outcome documents of the UN Conference on
Sustainable Development (Rio+20) and other major United Nations conferences, and on the
priorities expressed by the General Assembly when it called for the third International Conference on
Financing for Development (resolution 68/204), and should take into account the report of the Open
1
See for example: Report of the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts on Sustainable Development Financing,
A/69/315; UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2014
2
Synthesis Report of the Secretary-General on the post-2015 agenda, A/69/700