un-ohrlls the need for international support measures and special attention to lldcs un-ohrlls
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UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
The need for international support measures and
special attention to LLDCs
UN-OHRLLS
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Official Development Assistance (ODA)ODA receipts in LLDCs
0
5
10
15
20
25
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
pe
rce
nta
ge
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
mil
lio
ns
ODA receipts, millions (constant $) As % of total ODA
• ODA to LLDCs more than doubled between 2000-2010, from $11 to $25.1 billion (in real terms)
• But 3.2% fall in 2011 (to $25.7 billion)• Remittances growing to $22 billion in 2012• But reducing high cost of remittances remains key, as well as need to
strengthen institutional framework for effective mobilization of remittances for productive purposes
Remittances to LLDCs
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
2012
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Official Development Assistance (ODA)
Largest LLDC ODA recipients
• Unequal concentration within LLDC group • Top 2 recipients, Afghanistan and Ethiopia, account for 40%• High aid-dependency: 13 LLDCs rely on ODA for at least 20% of
the central government expenditure between 2003 and 2010
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Aid for Trade
• Aid for Trade commitments to LLDCs more than doubled from $4.1 billion in 2002-2005 to $8.7 billion in 2010 (in real terms)
• A real fall of 17% in 2011 (to $7.7 billion)• Top 3 recipients (Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Uganda) account for 40% of
the group’s total Aid for Trade
Aid for Trade commitments to LLDCs (2010 constant $ billions)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
2002-2005
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Trade policy,regulations andtrade-relatedadjustment
Building productivecapacity
Economicinfrastructure
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Technical AssistanceTechnical assistance programme• Provides training to enhance LLDCs ability to raise awareness of and
analyze multilateral trade agreements and trade issues and effectively participate in WTO negotiations
Technical assistance to LLDCs should be further encouraged in WTO trade negotiations, including market access, services, trade facilitation, investment and regional trade agreements
Technical assistance should be targeted to needs of individual LLDC situation
WTO accession• 24 LLDCs are WTO members, 2 joined in 2013, 6 are in accession process Targeted technical assistance should be provided to acceding LLDCs Peer-to-peer collaboration to share experiences between existing and
acceding WTO members and technical assistance, with support of international organizations and donors
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Preferential Market Access
• LLDCs’ share in world merchandise trade has increased in the latter half of the 2000s, but remains at just 1.2% in 2011
• Duty-free market access by developed countries on imports from LLDCs reached 93% in 2010 (excluding arms and oil), from 70% in 2000
• Developed countries and some more advanced developing countries extend preferential market tariff treatment to LLDCs’ exports under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) and special schemes
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
No preferential market access scheme specifically for LLDCs
Preference scheme Beneficiaries Coverage Period
European Union
GSP
All LLDCs (except Moldova and Macedonia; Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan will not be eligible after Jan 2014)
66% of tariff lines (6,209) at tariff reductions or duty-free, in addition 25% of tariff lines that are duty-free under MFN
1971 - December 2013
GSP+Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bolivia, Mongolia, Paraguay
66% of tariff lines at tariff reduction or duty-free, in addition 25% of tariff lines that are duty-free under MFN
2009-2013
United States
African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA)
Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Ethiopia, Lesotho, Malawi, Mali, Niger, Rwanda, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia
1,683 tariff lines (90%) duty-free in addition to GSP lines and 3,868 duty-free lines under MFN
May 2000-September 2015
Canada GSP All LLDCs 80.6% of tariff lines duty-free (6,720 tariff lines)1974 - 30 June 2014
Japan GSP All LLDCs3,478 tariff lines at various tariff reductions, including duty-free treatment
1971 - March 2012
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
FDI has great potential to spur economic growth and development in LLDCs through:
• Enhanced financing• Technology transfer• Building of productive capacities• Infrastructure development• Employment creation and improved management
techniques
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
• Few resource-rich countries receive most of FDI
• Top 5 recipients countries account for 70% of the group’s total
• But 12 LLDCs experienced fall in FDI
• Majority of FDI to LLDCs is greenfield investments in extractive industries
FDI inflows to LLDCs (billions of current $)
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
Kazakhstan
Mongolia
Turkmenistan
Zambia
Chad
Azerbaijan
Uzbekistan
Niger
Other 23 LLDCs
2011
2010
FDI inflows grew 24% in 2011 to $34.8
billion, almost four-fold since 2003
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
National and international enabling environment Promote regional integration and cooperation Boost aid for productive capacity and technical
assistance Create conducive macroeconomic and regulatory
framework Encourage public-private partnerships, particularly for
infrastructure investments Provide financial assistance and insurance guarantees to
encourage firms, particularly SMEs investing abroad, through export credits, investment risk protection guarantees, concessional loans, especially for infrastructure projects
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Benefits of regional integration and cooperation
• Increasing economies of scale• Effective participation of LLDCs in the regional integration efforts• Improved regional infrastructure network and completion of missing
links: Asian Highway and the Trans-Asian Railway networks, Trans-African Highway, Euro-Asian Transport Links road and rail routes
• Regional legal framework, harmonizing of policies and programmes
• Ensuring greater intra-regional trade
• South-South cooperation, in particular from transit countries, offers potential for increased financial and technical assistance for LLDCs and diversified trade opportunities
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Growing role of international and regional institutions
• UN, regional commissions, multilateral institutions including WTO, World Bank, regional development banks, some sub-regional organizations recognized and mainstreamed APoA
• Post-2015 agenda and SDGs need to remain focus on most vulnerable countries, including LLDCs
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Almaty Unfinished Agenda
• But it is unfinished agenda • LLDCs continue to face serious constraints because of
their lack of access to sea, remoteness major markets, inadequate transit facilities and services
• International community does not fully recognize their special needs and response to address their needs
• Almaty is not Programme for LLDCs only, but it is global partnership framework for transit transport cooperation
• New programme would offer 3 WINS: Win for the LLDCs, win for the transit neighbours and win for their development partners. This is particularly true in today’s new reality and landscape of international trade
• DELIVERABLES AND SPECIFIC ACTIONS?
UN-OHRLLSUN-OHRLLS
Thank you