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سلسلة السياسات التمويلية من IATF

يجمع هذا القسم المساهمات الرئيسية في الورقة الختامية.

Displaying 49 - 63 of 63

IATF and Other International Organizations

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNHCR

Forced Displacement - Comprehensive Finance for Affected Countries

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: WTO
Action Areas: Domestic and International Private Business and Finance

This policy brief addresses the $1.5 trillion global trade finance gap, which disproportionately impacts small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in developing economies. It outlines key challenges, including high rejection rates and compliance costs, and proposes targeted solutions such as expanding risk-sharing frameworks, strengthening local financial institutions, and promoting climate-friendly trade finance. The brief emphasizes the need for multilateral cooperation to close the gap, promote inclusive growth, and support the transition to a low-carbon global economy.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: IATF Gender Cluster

Financing for Gender Equality

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: ILO
Action Areas: International Trade as an Engine for Development

Investment is necessary but not sufficient for achieving inclusive economic growth and decent work. The ILO MNE Declaration provides an investment framework for coherent and synergistic policies concerning job creation, enterprise development, formalization, skills development and protection of workers’ rights. Consultation with social partners can ensure that decent work is prioritized while also enabling enterprises to grow. And dialogue between host and home countries could lead to better alignment of policies and ODA to support investment facilitation for development.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNCTAD

Sovereign Debt Workout Mechanisms: The G20 Common Framework and Beyond

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNODC, IMF and WB

To make measurable progress in combatting illicit financial flows related to the proceeds of crime Member States should prioritize preventing money laundering and the financing of terrorism, including in the outcomes of the Fourth Financing for Development Conference and resolutions. Financial crime has direct negative macroeconomic impacts and preventing it is foundational to sustainable development. It can only be addressed through a whole of government approach. Safeguarding payments and remittance flows, developing stable and inclusive financial sectors capable of supporting inclusive economic growth and protecting domestic resource mobilization all require a foundation of financial integrity grounded in effective, risk-based Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) frameworks.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Action Areas: Science, Technology, Innovation, and Capacity Building
Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: INFF

Making Finance work for People and Planet - Strengthening Country Financing Systems through Integrated National Financing Frameworks

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNCTAD

Better Data on Trade in Services for Effective FFD Strategies

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: WHO
Action Areas: Domestic Public Resources

This brief offers a global overview of health spending and highlights the critical role of health expenditure data in shaping policies to achieve the SDG health targets. It calls on countries and global partners to strengthen health expenditure tracking via health accounts to improve policymaking, enhance transparency, and promote accountability.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: ESCAP
Action Areas: Debt and Debt Sustainability

Public debt distress has three distinct underlying causes which should be evaluated and addressed differently. Similarly, traditional bilateral, non-traditional bilateral and commercial creditors have shared but differentiated responsibilities in sovereign debt restructuring. Proper resolution of sovereign debt distress should ideally be guided by these two principles/realities, while continuing with pragmatic second-best approaches. Debtor countries should also hold their side of the bargain by ensuring accountable and productive use of borrowed funds and effective public debt management.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: OHCHR

Keeping Global Financing Promises: Advancing Development, Human Rights, and International Cooperation

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNFPA

Demographic change is one of the most powerful yet largely neglected factors shaping financing for sustainable development. It not only has implications for the expenditure side of public and private budgets, but also for the revenue side, and thus on budgets and debt. This brief makes the case for systematic consideration of demographic change and other megatrends in planning and budget processes of countries.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: WTO
Action Areas: International Trade as an Engine for Development

This policy brief explores the challenges of trade fragmentation and inequality in the global economy, focusing on the impact on low- and middle-income countries. It outlines policy solutions to reduce trade costs, invest in infrastructure, promote economic diversification, and strengthen global trade governance. Specific recommendations for the Fourth Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4) include financing for trade infrastructure, bridging the digital divide, improving access to finance, and reducing trade barriers to foster inclusive and sustainable development.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: Green Climate Fund
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues

The global finance landscape remains fragmented, insufficient, and not fit-for-purpose, limiting access for developing countries most in need. Urgent reforms are required to simplify access, scale up concessional finance, and mobilize private sector capital through blended finance mechanisms. Strengthening country ownership and improving transparency across financial flows are key priorities. The Fourth Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4) should advocate for these reforms to close the sustainable development finance gap and accelerate progress toward global goals, especially for vulnerable and low-income countries. FFD4 must be the running point that transforms global financing landscape into a truly inclusive, scalable, impactable, fit-for-purpose and sustainable engine for achieving the SDGs, Post-2015 development Agenda, and Paris Agreement goals by 2030.