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Inputs to the Outcome Document

This section compiles key contributions to the Outcome Paper.

Displaying 1 - 16 of 18

IATF and Other International Organizations

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: UNCTAD
Action Areas: Domestic Public Resources

Illicit financial flows (IFFs) significantly drain resources, with trade-IFFs alone accounting 5-30% of total goods trade in pilot countries, financing crime, exacerbating inequalities and instability. Effective action requires data-informed analytics, whole-of-government approaches and stronger international cooperation for common tools and technologies. All countries need evidence-based policies to address IFFs, allowing crime prevention rather than costly corrective measures. FfD4 outcome should prioritize these strategies, resourcing data reporting and establishing a platform for collaboration and methods development.

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

Integrating Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) into Financing for Development is essential for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). While technological advancements offer opportunities, they can disrupt growth pathways and increase inequalities if mismanaged. Key recommendations include directing technology to create middle-class jobs and labour-absorbing sectors, improving access to scientific knowledge and technological innovations through open science and flexible intellectual property regimes, fostering South-South cooperation, and mobilizing development financing, including Official Development Assistance (ODA) to close technological gaps.

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

Addressing both social and environmental objectives is essential to mitigate risks and seize opportunities related to the low-carbon transition. A just transition requires supportive financial flows and enabling financial systems. Member States can support mobilization of financial resources for a just transition by leveraging public development banks, incentivizing the use of financing instruments that attract private capital, developing comprehensive sustainable finance frameworks that consider social and environmental objectives, and developing capacities within the financial system.

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

Global FDI flows declined since 2015, hindering progress towards the SDGs. FfD4 should seek to leverage partnerships between investment stakeholders, enhance countries’ readiness to attract investment in SDG, and promote home-country initiatives to channel investment. SWFs and institutional investors possess substantial capital that can be directed toward infrastructure and SDG, while more de-risking initiatives need to be developed. Systematic efforts to advance sustainability standards and address greenwashing is essential to grow sustainable finance.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: UNCTAD
Action Areas: International Development Cooperation

The momentum to measure South-South cooperation is growing rapidly, spurred by the endorsement of SDG indicator 17.3.1 and the voluntary ‘Framework to Measure South-South Cooperation’. Developed by the global South, the Framework aims to provide data on South-South cooperation to enable first-ever globally inclusive information on international development support by reflecting the realities of the global South. To unlock its full potential, significant support, technical training, harmonized tools, and targeted assistance, is needed for countries.

Category: IATF and Other International Organizations
Country/Source: ILO
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues

Scaling up the Global Accelerator on Jobs and Social Protection for Just Transitions

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: WHO
Action Areas: Domestic Public Resources

Financing the Pathway Towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC): Improving Health Sector Priority Setting

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: ILO

This brief presents evidence on coverage and financing gaps for universal social protection (USP), offering actionable recommendations for FfD4. The ILO estimates that to ensure at least a social protection floor, low- and middle-income countries require an additional investment of US$ 1.4 trillion (3.3 per cent of the aggregate GDP) of these countries. To close the financing gap countries must increase investment in social protection, raising effective coverage by 2 percentage points annually (SDG indicator 1.3.1). At the international level, debt relief should move at a faster pace and access to international emergency financing must be enhanced to enable regular investment in USP in a climate-volatile world and avoid repeated rounds of austerity.

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

The policy brief emphasizes the need for a long-term perspective and a stable investment environment for CETM projects, highlighting the importance of clear government regulations. It advocates expanding the capital base in developing countries through innovative financing mechanisms and lowering borrowing costs via international cooperation. The policy brief also underscores the importance of a holistic approach to financing, promoting value addition and diversification throughout the CETM value chain.

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

This brief argues that taxation policies on tobacco, alcohol, and sugary drinks present a timely and effective strategy for advancing sustainable development while improving public health and well-being. Health taxes not only generate government revenue through higher tax rates but also promote healthier behaviors, leading to improved health outcomes and productivity gains that benefit society as a whole. Over the next five years, increases in tobacco, alcohol, and SSB taxes could generate an additional $3.7 trillion USD in government revenues globally—an average of $740 billion USD per year, equivalent to 12% of global health budgets and 0.75% of global Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

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

Multilateral Credit: Filling in the Financial Gap?

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: WHO
Action Areas: Domestic Public Resources

Financing for Sustainable Progress to Universal Health Coverage