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Sunday, July 20, 2014

Chapter on the Future of Aid in the Global Policy Journal's new e-book on "The Donor's Dilemma"

 
 
 
As poverty declines, what if the remaining pockets of poverty are increasingly focused in countries where aid is already on the way to becoming irrelevant as domestic resources grow - such as some middle income countries - or in countries which cannot absorb aid easily and quickly – meaning many fragile states?
This is the question addressed by contributors to Global Policy’s first e-book entitled ‘The Donors’ Dilemma: Emergence, Convergence and the Future of Aid', guest edited by Dr Andy Sumner, Co-Director, King’s International Development Institute, King’s College London, and Tom Kirk, Researcher at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

To purchase the entire e-book for $2.99 please click here (or for a Amazon Kindle version please click here).*



Contents
INTRODUCTION
Andy Sumner - The Donors’ Dilemma: Emergence, Convergence and the Future of Foreign Aid
SECTION I - NEW APPROACHES: FROM TRADITIONAL AID TO GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS
1. Nancy Birdsall - The Future of Aid: 2030 ODA No More
2. Myles Wickstead - The Future of Aid and Beyond
3. Jonathan Glennie - A Manifesto for International Public Finance in the 21st Century
4. Inge Kaul - Time to Think in Terms of Global Public Policy
5. José Antonio Alonso - From ODA to a Global Development Policy
6. David Ritter and Jessica Panegyres - Climate Change and the Future of Aid
7. Asuncion Lera St. Clair - Transforming Development Aid
SECTION II - NEW OBJECTIVES: FROM POVERTY REDUCTION TO EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT
8. Erik Solheim - The Age of Equality
9. Duncan Green - Shifting the Focus to Knowledge, Inequality and Universal Challenges
10. Ravi Kanbur - Resetting IDA’s Graduation Policy
11. Tony Addison and Finn Tarp - Aid and Growth in Africa
12. Vivan Sharan - Traditional Aid Has No Future: Markets and India’s Lines of Credit
13. Jason Hickel- Aid in Reverse: How Poor Countries Develop Rich
SECTION III - NEW MOTIVATIONS: FROM POST-COLONIAL CHARITY TO DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION AS FAIRER GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
14. David Held and Kyle McNally - Globalisation and Development
15. Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah - From Charity to Social Justice
16. Thomas Pogge - Addressing the Structural Roots of Persistent Underdevelopment
17. John Podesta - Beyond Zero Sum
18. Linah K. Mohohlo - A Change in Mindset is needed if Aid is to Remain Relevant
19. Karl Muth - Aid Circa 2032: Three Players, No Winners
SECTION IV - NEW WAYS OF WORKING: FROM ALLOCATING MONEY TO WORKING CATALYTICALLY
20. Simon Maxwell - What is the future of International Development?
21. Ben Ramalingam - Aid on the Edge of Chaos: Rethinking international cooperation in a complex world
22. Edward R. Carr - The Future is Already Being Fed
23. Shanta Devarajan - Aid as Disruption
24. Andy Sumner – Did global poverty just fall a lot, quite a bit or not at all?
CONCLUSION
25. Andy Sumner and Tom Kirk - The Donors’ Dilemma: A wrap up of the debate

*To access the individual chapters for free please see here.

Interview with Voice of Russia, 15 July, 2014

 
 
As the 6th BRICS summit kicks off in the Brazilian city of Fortaleza, attending the two-day event the leaders of Russia, China, Brazil, India and South Africa are set to ink a deal on the establishment of a 100-billion-dollar joint development bank. Discussions will focus on the contribution from each member state and where to locate the bank's headquarters.

Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC and president of Just Foreign Policy, explained to Radio VR that it is actually intended to be an alternative to the IMF and the World Bank. The joint development bank and the reserve fund are supposed to be analogues of these institutions which reflect the post-World War II economic and political order, with the United States being the only standing industrial power in the world. The BRICS leaders, he said, "will try to create something that represents most of the world."
"The details are not clear yet," he said. "So, that has to be worked out. I think it is interesting that they are actually committing to something this big. I mean this is very big. A hundred billion dollars is probably more that the IMF lent to countries outside of Europe in the last year or in any recent year. Most of the IMF lending is in Europe now, no longer in developing countries. That has changed with the euro-zone crisis."
But, he adds, the decision to create the bank is a politically motivated move.
"Everything is political in the sense that we have this world order dominated by the United States and Washington-based institutions," he said. "Even the WTO, for example, is dominated by the rich countries, not as much as the IMF and the Bank because the developing countries form blocks and negotiate there more than they do in the fund of the Bank when they are really run by the US and its allies."
"So, these are the major institutions and it is the G20 which is still dominated by the rich countries. So, from the G7 you can see how the US and its allies control everything. So, these are the major institutions of global economic government. They don't have a voice, the IMF and the Bank in particular don't have a voice for the majority of the world. And now this is a new period, I mean it is a more multipolar world. This is what BRICS is helping to give birth to. It is long overdue. China is the biggest economy in the world right now on a purchasing power-parity basis. So, it is silly to have these institutions operating and managing as if we were living in the world of 1946."
And Vivan Sharan, an expert on BRICS with the Observer Research Foundation in India, is convinced that there are at least two objectives behind the move. The first is that each of the BRICS' countries is at a critical stage of socio-economic transformation. India, for instance, is tempting to transition from being a low-middle income country to a middle income country, which requires a number of infrastructure initiatives aimed at development. And similarly in other BRICS countries. So there is an effort through the BRICS development bank to supplement some of the world that has already been funded through other multilateral banks.
The second nuance is to create, through this development intervention, in BRICS, as well as other developing countries, an alternative narrative to the one that has been in place for the last 50 to 60 years since World War II, which was put in place by The Bretton Woods institutions and has essentially stayed unchanged, even though the world has changed significantly since then.
But Ms. Memory Dube, senior researcher in the Economic Diplomacy Programme, working on the global economic governance project, argues that the goal actually is not exactly to challenge the World Bank, but to complement to what the World Bank is doing with slightly different focus on developing countries.
"Even that this bank has been established by the BRICS, there is some indication that they will open it up to other developing countries and may be developed countries as well, in terms of contributing to the fund," she told Radio VR. "We are still yet to get more details - where the bank is going to be based, where its headquarters are going to be, what its structure is going to be. But the indication is that the bank, its infrastructure and investment primarily is going to be focused on developing countries. At a certain point those will be the BRICS countries themselves."
Ms. Memory Dube is convinced that the bank is set to give substance to the group. It is kind of a process consolidating themselves as a group. She says that the idea is politically motivated. And the politics is about forcing other institutions – IMF and the World Bank to reform.
"The new development bank is in fact a way of challenging the world institutions - the World Bank, the IMF – not being something that will compete with these institutions, but forcing reforms in those institutions. So, if the IMF does not reform in the way the BRICS want them to reform, they will have an alternative. And this alternative might force the IMF to start implementing the reforms that they have been talking about over the past years. "
Read more: http://voiceofrussia.com/2014_07_15/BRICS-helping-engender-multipolar-world-experts-6075/

Interview with Channel News Asia on BRICS and India, 15 July, 2014


 On why there is need for a New Development Bank:

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/vivan-sharan-associate/1265714.html

Quoted by the Inter Press Service, July 12, 2014

FORTALEZA, Brazil, Jul 12 2014 (IPS) - The first common institutions to be set up by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – the BRICS – are financial, and have arisen as a result of reforms to an international system that continues to largely ignore the growing influence of emerging countries.
 
But the Contingency Reserve Arrangement (CRA), the BRICS countries’ monetary fund, will also be unbalanced in the composition of its resources, leading to the possible reproduction of these inequalities.
 
The cement that binds the BRICS together is their aspiration to wield more power in international economic bodies.

The CRA and a development bank will be formally established at the Sixth BRICS Summit, to be held in Brazil on Tuesday Jul. 15 in the northeastern city of Fortaleza and on Wednesday Jul. 16 in Brasilia. On Monday, preparatory meetings will take place between ministers, members of the business community and the group’s central banks.
 
The reserve fund will have 100 billion dollars to come to the rescue of any of its members suffering an exchange crisis. China would contribute 41 percent of the total, South Africa – the smallest partner – five percent, and the other countries 18 percent each.
 
These percentages reflect the size of each country’s economy. However, participation in the New Development Bank (NDB), the other instrument that will be established at the summit, will be on the basis of equal shares: 10 billion dollars each and equal voting rights for each member.
 
This is the big difference between the NDB and the World Bank, of which it is a reflection. “The NDB is democratic,” Christopher Wood, a researcher for the South African Institute of International Affairs in Johannesburg, told IPS.
 
This aspect of the NDB is also very different from the CRA, where China, as the largest country, “will probably have a disproportionate influence,” but it is hoped that the design of the institution will prevent it from being overly one-sided, Wood said.
 
Negotiations have been under way to create the development bank and the monetary mechanism since 2012, and now only a legal review is required before they are signed by the five BRICS leaders in Fortaleza, announced José Alfredo Graça Lima, the undersecretary- general for political affairs at the Brazilian foreign ministry.
 
BRIC, an acronym coined in 2001 by U.S. economist Jim O’Neill for the four emerging powers that are changing the shape of the world, began to hold meetings of heads of state and government in 2009, forming “a coalition” that was joined by South Africa in 2011.
 
“It is not a bloc” that adopts common policies for trade and other sectors, Brazilian diplomats said in response to critical observations about the discrepancies between the countries in different economic or political international forums.
 
The huge countries, or “whale-economies,” are getting to know each other and have expanded their dialogue. They have “a positive role in democratising international relations,” Graça Lima said.

Cooperation between the five countries is already ongoing in more than 30 areas, and their societies are also interacting through business and academic forums and other means, said Flavio Damico, the head of the Brazilian foreign ministry’s department of inter-regional mechanisms.
 
But the cement that binds the BRICS together is their aspiration to wield more power in international economic bodies. “The structure of power and privileges” of the global financial and political system “has remained set in stone” since 1945, and will have to change “to adjust to present reality,” he said.
The blocking of a proposed reform of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the U.S. Congress spurred the BRICS countries to make headway with their own solutions. The CRA will probably “not substantially change the world economic order in the short term, but it certainly could erode the centrality of the IMF in the long run,” said Wood.
 
The CRA is being formed in the context of persistent after-effects of the 2008 financial crisis and the “systemic imbalances in the global economy, perpetuated by the monetary policies of advanced economies, such as the United States and the European Union,” Vivan Sharan, an expert on BRICS with the Observer Research Foundation in India, told IPS.
 
With the “monetary safety net,” BRICS will be signalling “lesser levels of dependence on Bretton Woods institutions such as the IMF, which urgently requires structural and governance reform,” he said. But the group is not aiming at “a recalibration of the global economic order,” he said.
 
Brazilian economist Fernando Cardim, professor emeritus of economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, doubts the CRA will be successful. Its resources will be too few, as its entire funds would not even be able to protect Brazil alone from mass capital flight, he argued.
 
Moreover, it will not necessarily prevent potential intra-BRICS strife, as China will have decisive powers “similar to or even greater than those of the United States over the IMF,” and is likely to wield power with less subtlety, he said.
 
But the BRICS institutions are not seeking to substitute for or confront the IMF or the World Bank. The CRA’s goal is to “complement” them, as “an additional line of defence” for the five countries, which are not facing balance of payment difficulties, according to Graça Lima.
 
The IMF’s resources total 937 billion dollars, more than nine times the value of CRA funds, and it will continue to play a key role for the CRA itself and other monetary mechanisms created to combat financial crises, Wood said.
 
In the Chiang Mai Initiative, a similar mechanism adopted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations after the region’s 1997-1998 crisis, and which is backed by China, South Korea and Japan, countries must first request IMF assistance if they wish to draw a large loan from the funding pool, said Wood.
 
The NDB, already known as the BRICS Development Bank, is less controversial, although it has drawn criticism from social and environmental activists. The plan is for it to begin financing infrastructure and sustainable development projects in two years’ time, after obtaining parliamentary approval from member countries.
 
Its starting capital of 50 billion dollars is limited in comparison with the needs of BRICS members and other developing countries that could benefit from loans and even join the bank. It is less than the amount loaned annually by Brazil’s National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES).
The Indian government, for instance, estimates that one trillion dollars are needed for financing domestic infrastructure projects over the next five years, around half of which is to come from the private sector.
 
However, new sources of funding are important because Indian infrastructure projects are facing serious liquidity challenges, as they are over-dependent on banking sector finance due to “the non-existence of a robust corporate bond market,” said Sharan in New Delhi.
 
“South Africa has a lot to gain,” as the NDB will focus on large infrastructure projects, a common problem amongst all the BRICS, and can offer long-term financing which is often difficult to obtain, particularly from the private sector, Wood said. It will also support project preparation, like surveying work, which often needs to be done before financing for the project can be accessed.
 
The NDB is authorised to double its funds, but its key importance is that co-financing projects acts as a catalyst, by reducing the risk and cost burden for other lenders and so attracting resources from private investors and national and multilateral development banks around the world, according to Wood and the Brazilian diplomats.
 
With additional reporting from Ranjit Devraj in New Delhi and Brendon Bosworth in Johannesburg.

Global Times Op Ed - BRICS Needs a Dose of Steroids to Prosper, Samir Saran and Vivan Sharan, July 13, 2014

 
 
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is simultaneously navigating her socialist and internationalist moment, after a face-off with the Americans on the NSA spying saga. She has reasserted Brazil's propositional role in the global order by hosting the ambitious NETmundial - Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin's European misadventures have gotten him embroiled in a controversial international debate on sovereignty, while his country's economy struggles to overcome structural flaws. 

On the back of a decisive popular mandate, the new Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi faces tough regional challenges, even as he tries to revive industrial output and create jobs. 

Chinese President 
Xi Jinping is in charge of an administration which has courted altercations on various fronts while in search of a new and sustainable model for economic growth. 

And recently re-elected South African President Jacob Zuma has to contend with both a weak political mandate and rising socioeconomic inequity, while attempting to reconcile differences with African neighbors. 

Each of the BRICS leaders is faced with significant challenges. How useful will coordination and cooperation at the BRICS platform be for each of them? The BRICS platform itself will first need doses of steroids if it is to remain viable.

This past year has been quite unsettling for those interested and invested in BRICS. Economic growth of the member countries has been below par. The external economic environment has not been favorable either. 

The promise of BRICS is based on new economic and political opportunities. The group is lean and lithe by design and therefore has the right ingredients to make for a 21st century cooperation and coordination platform. Both these characteristics were on display when the group met in India in 2012, where a number of forward-looking economic and political decisions were made. However, neither critical decision-making nor effective implementation has been on display over the last year. Relating to this, there are five concerns that must be addressed at this year's BRICS summit.

First of all, the focus of the previous summit was clearly on African issues. The eThekwini Declaration in 2013 focuses on unlocking Africa's potential, regional integration for Africa's growth and the New Partnership for Africa's Development. With the continued moderation of growth rates, the grouping must prioritize domestic economic imperatives and close commercial ties rather than narrowly focus on a single region or use the platform for regional grandstanding.

The second concern follows directly from the first. BRICS members have large stakes in the international system and share the common aspiration of becoming global agenda-setters. Indeed, they must not continue to be passive recipients of rules and standards in vital areas such as global trade and investment. 

Third, the new areas of cooperation listed in last year's declaration outlining areas for immediate collaboration are strikingly vague. As a result of myopic drafting, a rather counter-productive role reversal has taken place. The interactions between non-government stakeholders have started to lag behind inter-governmental interactions. 

Governments have limited vocabulary and dynamism compared with the private sector and civil society and intra-BRICS cooperation must be unfettered and creative. An example is the BRICS Exchange Alliance, a market-led initiative to integrate financial trading platforms. Such concrete efforts must be replicated rather than endlessly expand the list of issues to cooperate on for the sake of seeming ambitious. 

The fourth concern relates to the veritable silence on BRICS engagements in the world media following the high-profile summit last year. Perception-building must take greater precedence at this summit. This must be aided by the timely dissemination of information on actions such as the setting up of the Contingency Reserve Fund and a BRICS-led development bank. 

And finally, perhaps the most critical issue for the five BRICS leaders, who will meet at the sunny shores of Fortaleza, will be practical goal-setting. This will be an exercise in planning and coordination to maintain continuity as well as honing in on objectives for the long term. If there is an opportunity to be seized in cross-leveraging political and economic ties, it will be in the coming years. 

Samir Saran is a vice president and Vivan Sharan is an associate fellow at Observer Research Foundation, Delhi. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn

Policy Brief: Reframing the Climate Debate, Vivan Sharan and Rei Tang, June 2014

The Observer Research Foundation (ORF), India and the Stanley Foundation, USA co-hosted an
international workshop on climate change on February 25-27, 2014 in New Delhi. The central
objective of the workshop was to unbundle the different policy responses resulting from the
multilateral negotiations thus far and their impact upon the evolution of existing and future
multilateral frameworks. This Policy Brief aims to capture some of the salient perspectives put
forward by a diverse group of international stakeholders from government, academia, and the
private sector:

http://orfonline.org/cms/export/orfonline/modules/policybrief/attachments/policybrief15_1403684159969.pdf

Chapter on "Migration in the 21st Century". Book title "Power and Hegemony: Contemporary Geo-political Narrative", ISBN 978-93-327-0137-3, First Published in 2014



Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Fix the Economy, Dont Target Big Business, Op-ed in Economic Times, 19 May

With the cacophony of the 16th Lok Sabha election behind us, it is time to reflect on the realities of the politicoeconomic system that constitutes the set of initial conditions for the next government. The economy is sluggish and structurally weak. More than 60 years after Independence, only a small minority can afford a decent living. Indira Gandhi had vowed to remove poverty ("Garibi hatao") while campaigning for the Congress in 1971, but the improvement has been so small, and the policy di .. 

Quoted by The Bangok Post, March 2014

Coal availability from Indonesia is going to become a concern over the next five to 10 years, according to Vivan Sharan, chief executive of the Global Governance Initiative of the Observer Research Foundation,... 

link:http://www.bangkokpost.com/business/news/402713/fuel-for-thought.

Review of Development cooperation and emerging powers: New partners or old patterns, in the South African Journal of International Affairs, March 2014

The on-going shift of the global economic centre of gravity from the West to the East and the North to the South has led to a rapid evolution of the development cooperation and aid architecture. Emerging and developing countries such as those within the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) grouping now account for a large proportionate share of global growth. The growth of these large economies has been spurred in part by integration with global and regional supply chains. Concomitantly, external stability and shared prosperity is of vital importance if their growth trajectories are to remain intact.
Development cooperation and emerging powers: New partners or old patterns, a book edited by Sachin Chaturvedi, Thomas Fues and Elizabeth Sidiropoulos, sketches the contours of the evolving development cooperation frameworks and experiences of individual emerging and developing countries. The book is divided into three sections: the first delves into the background of South–South cooperation, a historical concept which has established the structures and normative ideas within which emerging and developing countries largely place their development cooperation engagements; the second encompasses a nuanced narrative on the experiences of traditional aid and ‘donor’ countries; and the third focuses on the new actors, institutions and modalities in the development cooperation space.

Book Review of FDI in South Asia, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, February 2014

Globalization has changed the world significantly over the past two decades. The global economy is far more interconnected than before, and the progress of nations depends both on internal and external factors. Given resource constraints and lack of investment in developing South Asian countries, market forces and private investment, both external and internal, are increasingly been relied on as the engine of economic growth. The book has been written within this overarching contemporary context, and therefore is very relevant for readers interested in the South Asian economy.
South Asia has the world's largest working age population, a quarter of all middle-class consumers; and at the same time, it has the dubious distinction of being home to the largest number of poor and undernourished. In the book, the authors have managed to succinctly highlight some of the reasons for these cleavages. They note that after independence from colonial rule, South Asian countries ‘adopted closed macroeconomic policies with import substitution industrialization policies’ in an effort to encourage ‘self-reliance’. History has proven that this and subsequent policy planning based on normative underpinnings were costly missteps.

Read Full at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/v7ydFtkGSecna3sqqHjs/full

 

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

The Economic Legacy of Manmohan Singh, Vivan Sharan, January 29, 2014

http://thecitizen.in/city/the-economic-legacy-of-manmohan-singh-4/

 

The executive head of the world’s largest democracy, India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh held a national press conference for the first time in three years on 03 January. He did so ostensibly to announce that he will not serve a third term even if his government is re-elected. All signs point towards reelection being an increasingly unlikely prospect. He did not, however, miss the opportunity to also applaud his government’s efforts in steering India towards a record rate of economic growth in the last nine years. He did so while admitting that the country has entered into a period of “slowdown initiated by the global financial crisis”. This was a curious admission at a time when global growth has finally begun to pick up.
The most recent projections of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) point towards an increase in global growth. The IMF projects global growth at 3.6 per cent in 2014. However, in its forecasts, the IMF has also stated that this growth will be led by an increase in growth in advanced economies. Meanwhile the ‘emerging economies’, of which India is a part, will continue to be exposed to downside economic risks. This is the ‘new normal’ global economy that Manmohan Singh has to contend with until he is in office. Reaffirming this trend, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in its mid – quarterly review released in December stated that there will be “uneven recovery” across industrial countries. Indeed 2014 will continue to be unpredictable and challenging.
While aware that this may be the last time he would address the country, Mr. Singh did not seem as confident as he did in 2010, the last time he held a similar press conference. His explanation for a remarkably poorly managed reversal in India’s fortunes, was that India is “no exception” to “all emerging economies”. There is little merit in pointing out that sub 5 per cent growth, India’s new reality, is reminiscent of the closed and controlled economy it once was. It is hardly characteristic of a progressive, liberal market economy with a large and young demographic base. And this is precisely the flaw in the PM’s argument. How can India be in a race to the bottom with all other emerging economies when once, hyphenated with China, it was once touted to be in a race to the top?
Mr. Singh insists that this phase will not last long. He says that the Indian people should not “focus overly on the short term”. He should perhaps revisit the transcript of the 2010 press conference where he exuded confidence in India’s inherent resilience to the financial crisis. He said that his government would “ensure” that India “gets a growth rate of about 10 per cent”. Surely the executive head of the country should have tempered such optimism with an informed understanding of the domestic and external environment? He failed to do so. Unfettered revenue spending, policy flux and focus on populist legislation, has left India with little to celebrate.
Growing from a low base, with close to 800 million people struggling to live decently, there is no ambiguity that India is at a crossroad. Perhaps at no other juncture in history have so many people stared at such an uncertain and inequitable future. Nearly 12 million enter the job market in India every year – close to half the population of Australia. A vast majority stares at grim prospects of sustainable and productive employment. The manufacturing sector is stagnating, choked by an inoperable business environment. Over 550 infrastructure projects are facing inordinate delays and cost escalation estimated at rupees two lakh crores.
To make matters worse, Ben Bernanke, the Governor of the US Federal Reserve, decided to ‘taper’ the on-going Quantitative Easing (QE) programme last month. The gradual scaling back of QE is premised on the simultaneous upturn in the American economy. The central bank will gradually stop buying mortgage backed securities which it was doing to provide banks with cash against the purchases – in a bid to stimulate investments. This means that the excess liquidity in the global banking system will no longer be available to the Indian economy in the form of short term flows, to camouflage the investment deficit. No doubt the deficit is structural and should have been addressed by meaningful policy and administrative reforms.
Mr. Singh insists he will be judged by history. Historians must note then, the irrational exuberance of Mr. Singh and his government over the past few years, despite multiple warning signs. The problems of the Indian economy raised here are not new. Indeed, many domestic and foreign stakeholders have repeatedly tried to sound the alarm. They have been stonewalled by the government. Now, in his veritable farewell to the nation, the PM has expressed concern over his government’s failure to create employment in the manufacturing sector and inability to combat price rise. By doing so now, did he want to suggest that these are recent issues? Why was he silent on these systemic challenges for the past three years? Perhaps only history will tell.

Interview by Voice of Russia of Global Recovery, Vivan Sharan, January 2013

South–South Cooperation: A Survey of Recent Trends; Vivan Sharan and Prashant Kumar, December, 2013

South–South cooperation can be traced back to the Bandung Conference of 1955. The
conference was held at a critical period in global transition as post–war movements were Staking shape in Asia and Africa. It was clear from the outset that development assistance,
technical cooperation and integration through trade and investment were to be pillars of economic
cooperation within the South–South framework. Thus cooperation was never circumscribed by a
donor–recipient construct, traditionally associated with North–South cooperation.

These concepts were further advanced by the Group of 77 (G-77), established in 1964 by seventy
seven developing countries at the end of the first session of the United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The distinctive feature of the G-77 is the emphasis on unity
and solidarity within the group of developing countries. From the first declaration of the G-77 in
Geneva, it is clear that South–South cooperation arises from a historical background which places
emphasis on shared prosperity through economic development.

Therefore any evaluation of South–South Cooperation must encompass the areas of trade,
investment and aid. This brief highlights the role for South–South cooperation in the 21st century
and does so by comparing North–South and South–South flows. One of the recurring themes here
is the fundamental change that has taken place in the global economy since the Global Financial
Crisis, which in turn has profound implications for each of the areas analysed. The share of developed countries' collective GDP as a proportion of global GDP has slipped from close to 80
per cent in 1990 to about 60 per cent in 2012. This brief emphasises that the crisis has helped to
reinforce similar macro trends within trade, investment and aid.
Read More: http://orfonline.org/cms/export/orfonline/modules/issuebrief/attachments/issuebrief65_1388636496297.pdf