CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Business / Qatar Business

Qatar calls for improving access to loans

Published: 30 Oct 2015 - 01:59 am | Last Updated: 03 Nov 2021 - 09:44 am
Peninsula

 

DOHA: The situation in the developing countries calls for broadening trade and investment activities, improving access to grants and loans along with putting in place mechanisms to implement the promised projects in line with the deliberations in the Doha Round in 2001, Qatar stated in the UN General Assembly in New York, QNA reported.
In a statement delivered in the 70th session of the UN General Assembly, Qatar said the financing for development commitments constitute an important platform to continue participation and make further progress in achieving sustainable and inclusive development and respecting all human rights, including the right to development. “This is the spirit of the Monterrey Consensus and the Doha Declaration, which were also boosted by the Addis Ababa action plan,” Sultan Ali Al Khayareen, a member of Qatar’s delegation said.
To eradicate poverty and hunger, achieve sustainable development and protect the environment, there is a need for more efforts in the form of partnership and solidarity at the global level to overcome the obstacles and challenges related to financing and creating an enabling environment for sustainable development, Al Kayareen said.
The lack of stability in the global financial markets coupled with the turmoil in the economies of developing and developed countries due to the financial and economic crisis threaten the achievements in the field of financing for development. The developing countries continue to suffer from decline in the financial, investment and trade flows along with decreasing flows of official development assistance.
The statement stressed the importance of growing and predictable official development assistance and debt relief, while stressing the need to fulfill all the commitments of official development assistance, pointing out that the Addis Ababa action plan represents an important milestone in endeavors to support and strengthen the global partnership for development, and is considered a solid foundation to boost the implementation of the post-2015 development plan.
The successful implementation of plan depends on the mobilisation and the availability of resources as well as the effective use of resources and partnerships between multi-stakeholder in the public and private sectors in order to achieve sustainable development goals, he said. “We are deeply concerned about what was highlighted in the report of the Secretary-General which said that more than 2.4 billion people continue to suffer from lack of access to clean water and sanitation services, and that 57 million children in the world remain out of school, and that more than half the world’s population lack coverage of social security systems.” 
Al Khayareen also outlined the importance of establishing a mechanism to enable developing countries to build, transfer and implement appropriate and environmentally sound technologies in information and communication technology fields in order to achieve sustainable development, noting the pivotal role of trade as a strong enabling tool for growth and development along with the establishment of a multilateral, open, non-discriminatory and equitable trading system as an integral part of this environment.

The Peninsula