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Seville Spain

Foro del ECOSOC sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo 2025 y 4ª Sesión del Comité Preparatorio para la FFD4

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El Foro del ECOSOC sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo se celebrará del 28 al 29 de abril de 2025, seguido de la Cuarta Sesión del Comité Preparatorio (4º PrepCom) para la Cuarta Conferencia Internacional sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo (FFD4) del 30 de abril al 1 de mayo de 2025 en el Consejo de Administración Fiduciaria, Sede de las Naciones Unidas, Nueva York. 

El 28 de abril, en un esfuerzo conjunto excepcional del Presidente del ECOSOC y los copresidentes del Comité Preparatorio Intergubernamental de la FFD4,  Ministros y altos funcionarios tendrán la oportunidad de expresar sus opiniones e impulsar el momentum político para la Conferencia FFD4. 

El Foro de este año tiene una gran importancia y un papel fundamental en la movilización de soluciones concretas para la FFD4. Celebrado de manera consecutiva con la cuarta sesión del Comité Preparatorio de la FFD, las deliberaciones del foro contribuirán a las discusiones sobre el resultado de la FFD4. 

Ambos eventos reúnen a , ministros y altos funcionarios gubernamentales, así como a altos funcionarios de organizaciones internacionales. También estarán representadas organizaciones de la sociedad civil, el sector empresarial y autoridades locales. 

El Foro de 2025 y la 4ta PrepCom se transmitirá en directo por UN Web TV. 

Haga clic en la categoría que mejor describa su organización para encontrar el portal de registro correspondiente dentro de esta sección: Participa 

Convocatoria conjunta para eventos paralelos 
Haz clic aquí para acceder a la versión en PDF del programa del Foro sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo. 

Haz clic aquí para visitar la página oficial del Foro sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo.


Programa del Foro FFD y la 4ª Sesión del Comité Preparatorio para la FFD4

Haga click aquí para el programa en pdf del Foro FFD

Haga click aquí para la página oficial del Foro FFD

Programme for 28th Abril, 2025

ECOSOC FFD Forum Opening session: Our joint ambition for the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: ECOSOC
Date:
Time: 10:00 AM - 10:45 AM

Chair: H.E. Mr. Bob Rae, President of ECOSOC

Opening and welcome remarks

  • H.E. Mr. Bob Rae, President of ECOSOC
  • H.E. Mr. António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations
  • H.E. Mr. Philemon Yang, President of the General Assembly

 

Introductory remarks by the Co-chairs of the Preparatory Committee of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development and the Host of the Conference

  • H.E. Mr. Zéphyrin Maniratanga Permanent Representative of Burundi
  • H.E. Mr. Rui Vinhas Permanent Representative of Portugal
  • H.E. Ms. Eva María Granados Galiano, Secretary of State for International Cooperation of Spain
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues, Debt and Debt Sustainability, Domestic and International Private Business and Finance, Domestic Public Resources, International Development Cooperation, International Trade as an Engine for Development, Science, Technology, Innovation, and Capacity Building

Ministerial fireside chat 1 : Lowering borrowing costs and advancing development-oriented debt solutions

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: ECOSOC
Date:
Time: 10:45 AM - 11:55 AM

In response to successive shocks, multilateral lenders have made efforts to increase the provision of concessional resources while international financial institutions have advanced important institutional reforms. Yet, many developing countries continue to face high debt service burdens and borrowing costs, which severely constrain their fiscal space for critical investments to support three dimensions of Sustainable Development. Sovereign debt restructurings, when needed, are often slow and unpredictable.

This session will discuss the steps needed to lower borrowing costs for developing countries and bring about a development-oriented sovereign debt architecture.

Framing questions:

  • How can international and national efforts strengthen efforts to support preventative debt measures, such as state contingent debt instruments, including climate resilient debt clauses?
  • What mechanisms can lower borrowing costs for developing countries and enhance fiscal space for sustainable development investments?
  • What steps are needed to ensure sovereign debt restructurings broadly support development priorities and are efficient, fair, predictable, coordinated, timely and orderly?

 

Chair: ECOSOC President/Vice-President

Moderator: Mr. Claver Gatete, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa

  • H.E. Mr. Gareth do Espírito Santo Guadalupe, Minister of Finance, São Tomé and Príncipe
  • H.E. Ms. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic Development and International Cooperation, Egypt
  • H.E. Mr. William Roos, Assistant Secretary for Multilateral, Development and Trade Affairs, Treasury, France

Civil society response from the floor (2 minutes)

Ministerial interactive discussion

Action Areas: Debt and Debt Sustainability

Programme for 29th Abril, 2025

Closing of the Forum

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: ECOSOC
Date:
Time: 12:45 PM - 01:00 PM

Chair: President of ECOSOC

  • Closing remarks by Ms. Amina Mohammed, United Nations Deputy Secretary General
  • Closing statement by the President of ECOSOC
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues, Debt and Debt Sustainability, Domestic and International Private Business and Finance, Domestic Public Resources, International Development Cooperation, International Trade as an Engine for Development, Science, Technology, Innovation, and Capacity Building

Dialogue with Senior Representatives of the WBG and IMF

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: ECOSOC
Date:
Time: 10:00 AM - 10:30 AM
  • Chair: H.E. Mr. Bob Rae, President of ECOSOC
  • Mr. Axel van Trotsenburg, Senior Managing Director, The World Bank Group [virtual]
  • Mr. Bo Li, Deputy Managing Director, IMF
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues, Debt and Debt Sustainability, Domestic and International Private Business and Finance, Domestic Public Resources, International Development Cooperation, International Trade as an Engine for Development, Science, Technology, Innovation, and Capacity Building

Special High-level Meeting with Bretton Woods Institutions, WTO and UNCTAD

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: ECOSOC
Date:
Time: 10:30 AM - 12:45 PM

Chair: H.E. Mr. Bob Rae, President of ECOSOC

10:30 – 10: 45 Opening Remarks by intergovernmental representatives

  • H.E. Dr. Ryadh Alkhareif, IMFC Deputy Chair, IMF (confirmed)
  • Representative of the Development Committee (tbc)
  • H.E. Mr. Paul Bekkers, President, Trade and Development Board, UNCTAD (video message)
  • H.E. Mr. Ambassador Saqer Abdullah Almoqbel, Chair of WTO General Council (tbc)

Interactive Dialogue between UN Permanent Representatives and the Executive Directors of the World Bank Group and IMF

 

10:45 – 11:40 Topic 1: The IMF’s Contribution to Financing for Development Agenda: Its Role in strengthening global macroeconomic and financial stability – a deep dive

The IMF has a strong role in helping countries maintain or restore macroeconomic and financial stability and implement sound policies that support sustainable and inclusive growth.

  1. What lessons can be learnt from the IMF’s continued policy advice, capacity development and lending efforts to support countries facing balance of payment needs?
  2. What past and current country examples would participants emphasize in highlighting the Fund’s support for strengthening countries’ macroeconomic frameworks, which are essential for sustainable development?

Speakers

Moderator: Veda Poon, IMF Liaison Committee Chair

  • Discussant: Member State
  • Discussant: Stakeholder - CSO
  • Executive Director, IMF
  • Interactive discussion: Questions/comments from the floor

 

11:40 – 12:35 Topic 2: The WBG’s Contribution to Financing for Development Agenda Reducing poverty and promoting sustainable development

Over the last 20 years, WBG’s annual financing grew fivefold to $120 billion in 2024, driven by shareholder support, capital framework reforms, and IDA financial transformation. The WBG Evolution has further expanded lending headroom, enhanced efficiency, introduced a new scorecard, and strengthened partnerships.

  1. Over the next years, what are the priorities the WBG should focus to further increase its effectiveness and development impact? How should knowledge contribute to this?
  2. In the new global context, what are the most realistic and effective avenues to further increase financial resources for development and emerging countries?
  3. Which specific sectors and structural reforms should the WBG focus on when providing advice and financial support to client countries?

Speakers

Moderator: Mr. Matteo Bugamelli, Dean, Board of Executive Directors, The World Bank Group

  • Discussant: Member State
  • Discussant: Stakeholder - CSO
  • Executive Director, WBG
  • Interactive discussion: Questions/comments from the floor

12:35 – 12:45 Summary remarks

  • Mr. Matteo Bugamelli, Dean, Board of Executive Directors, The World Bank Group
  • Ms. Veda Poon, Chair, Liaison Committee, IMF Executive Board
Action Areas: Addressing Systemic Issues, Debt and Debt Sustainability, Domestic and International Private Business and Finance, Domestic Public Resources, International Development Cooperation, International Trade as an Engine for Development, Science, Technology, Innovation, and Capacity Building

Programme for 30th Abril, 2025

Debt and the Cost of Borrowing

Category: Official Programme
Venue: UNHQ
Organizer: UN DESA FSDO
Date:
Time: 04:00 PM - 05:00 PM

Panel discussion 2 on specific actions in the first draft of the outcome document on ‘II.E. Debt and debt sustainability’

 

Introductory remarks and moderation

H.E. Ms. Merete Fjeld Brattested, Permanent Representative of Norway to the United Nations

H.E. Mr. Chola Milambo, Permanent Representative of Zambia to the United Nations

Panelists

Mr. Phil Stevens, Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, United Kingdom

Ms. Monica Asuna, The National Treasury, Kenya

Mr. Jose Correia, Director General, Economic and Development Cooperation, Cabo Verde

Discussants

Mr. Gianpiero Leoncini, Executive Vice-President, Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean

Interactive discussion (2-minute time limit)

Background and Guiding Questions

Amid successive crises and shocks, sovereign debt challenges have become one of the greatest obstacles to realizing sustainable development. Many developing countries face high debt service burdens and borrowing costs, which severely constrain their fiscal space and ability to address poverty and inequality and invest in sustainable development. Despite progress in reforming the debt architecture, restructurings are often still inadequate, late and too lengthy. A development-oriented debt architecture, based on sound and transparent analysis of debt sustainability, is urgently needed to address these debt challenges.

The debt chapter outlines four areas of actions to address these challenges, including actions to: i) strengthen debt management, debt transparency, and responsible borrowing and lending; ii) lower borrowing cost and enhance fiscal space for investment in sustainable development in developing countries; iii) achieve efficient, fair, predictable, coordinated, timely, and orderly restructurings; and iv) promote debt sustainability and credit assessment that are more accurate, objective and long-term oriented.

Panelists in this session are invited to pay particular attention to the proposals on strengthening and systematizing of liquidity and liability management support and on closing gaps in the debt architecture. They are invited to address the following questions:

  • What are the key constraints to scaling up and ensuring coordinated support to countries to enhance fiscal space and lower their cost of borrowing, and to provide related financial instruments, such as debt swaps and credit enhancements at scale? (action 42)
  • How can we provide such support at scale, taking into account the need for providing financial support, and for responsiveness to country-specific needs and circumstances? (42b)
  • What are the most critical gaps that need to be closed to create a development-oriented debt architecture? (action 43).
Action Areas: Debt and Debt Sustainability