FM bats for more help to low, middle income nations
The Hindu
At G20 meet, Nirmala Sitharaman moots a multilateral pool of funds for global public goods with independent governance
Special Correspondent
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday made a strong pitch for a multilateral initiative to support for low-income and middle-income countries in meeting pandemic and climate change risks, backed by an independent and transparent governance structure.
Speaking at the first G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank governors’ meeting this year, Ms. Sitharaman said a common pool of funds, with increased funding from multilateral development banks, must be made available for global public goods. The key, she said, would be to ensure that low-income countries are neither denied basic simple needs like PPE kits, nor should they be excluded from more expensive or complicated technological solutions.
Invoking former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan’s observation that global public goods is the one missing term in all parleys about global co-operation, Ms. Sitharaman said that the criticality of such goods has now been recognised in the context of the health and climate crisis facing the world.
“The crisis for mobilising resources is acute in low-income and middle-income countries as their own fiscal space for generating that kind of increased spending on healthcare and climate change is very limited,” she said. India, she noted, had put aside $29 billion for a mission to bolster healthcare infrastructure and providing insurance to the poor and the lower-income groups in the country through the pandemic.
“This pandemic actually has helped us bridge the gap between the resources and the requirement on the ground,” the Minister said, adding that fresh measures to help low-income countries must address the two lessons learnt from COVID-19 – ‘the preparedness was not adequate, the money we could spend was also not adequate’.
“Therefore, although all of us had the hearts in the right place, our hands were tied because we weren’t effectively prepared for this kind of a crisis. So I would look for new ways of funding and recognise that all of us will have to contribute towards the global public good,” she said in a discussion on strengthening global health architecture with United States’ Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and World Bank president David Malpass.