G20 must look beyond growth to help poor and create new Seoul development consensus

Publié: 11th octobre 2010

Growth is necessary but not sufficient to lift poor people out of poverty, international agency Oxfam said today as it published a briefing paper calling on the G20 to agree an historic new Seoul development consensus to help the world’s poorest.

The paper shows that people living in extreme poverty largely missed out on the benefits of growth in the last two decades of the 20th Century. The poorest received only 1.5 per cent of the $1.9 trillion additional global gross domestic product (GDP) even though they accounted for a third of the world’s population at the start of the period. Today, the poorest 40 per cent get just 5 per cent of the world’s income.

By contrast, the poorest have been hit hard by the recent global slump with the World Bank estimating that 64 million have been pushed into poverty by the crisis and the poorest countries suffering a $65bn fiscal hole, forcing them to make cuts to health, education and agriculture spending. This comes at a time when millions of poor people are already struggling as a result of increased food prices and extreme weather linked to climate change.

G20 officials are meeting in Seoul on Thursday and Friday this week to lay the foundations of the G20’s approach to development ahead of the Heads of State summit next month.

Jasmine Burnley, Oxfam policy adviser and co-author of The Making of a Seoul Development Consensus, said: “These startling statistics show the scale of the failure of the discredited Washington consensus and the need for G20 leaders to break with the past and provide real global economic leadership in tackling poverty.

Economic growth is vital to help poor people escape poverty, but history teaches us that it is not enough on its own. We need to see a new Seoul Consensus that not only drives economic growth but is sustainable and ensures the poorest receive a fair share of the benefits.

“That means action to shine a light into the murky activities of tax havens which hold hundreds of billions of dollars belonging to poor countries. It means grasping the challenges of growth in a new era of resource constraints, protecting poor people’s access to land and water vital for growing food in the face of a growing number of international land acquisitions. And it means doing more to achieve the fair trade rules the Doha round of negotiations promised but has failed to deliver.

The G20 should ensure that investment in agriculture, free health care and education are stepped up, not reduced in response to the economic crisis. Malaria alone costs Africa $12bn each year in lost revenue and improvements in education are clearly linked to increases in GDP. In this way, helping the poorest will boost the global economy to the benefit of all.”

Oxfam is calling on G8 countries to meet their existing promises to increase overseas aid. It also wants the G20 to take action to fix the hole in poor countries’ budgets by introducing a financial transaction tax on the banks, hedge funds and other institutions whose greed did so much to cause the economic crisis.

Burnley said: “It cannot be right that while banks have received trillions in state bailouts poor countries are left without any alternative but to slash essential services to the poor as a result of a crisis they did nothing to cause.

Taxing the financial sector is the fairest way to protect the poorest from the damage done by the global financial elite.”

Download the report: The Making of a Seoul Development Consensus: The essential development agenda for the G20 (pdf, 111kb)

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Economic growth is vital to help poor people escape poverty, but history teaches us that it is not enough on its own
Jasmine Burnley
Oxfam policy adviser

Contact

Jon Slater +44 (0)1865 472249/+44 (0)7876 476403/jslater@oxfam.org.uk