Team Blitz India
NEW DELHI: India’s G20 presidency is set to chart a transformative course for multilateral development banks (MDBs) as Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiled plans to bolster these institutions in confronting the challenges of the 21st century.
Speaking at the India-Japan Forum last week, Sitharaman emphasised the significance of the first volume of the NK Singh and Lawrence Summers report, which delves into effective solutions for tackling evolving issues such as poverty alleviation and shared prosperity within MDBs.
MDB transformation
The second part of the report, slated for release in October, will chart the path for MDB transformation, enabling them to effectively tackle ongoing and forthcoming global economic challenges. Finance ministers are expected to discuss this roadmap during the G20 Annual meeting in Marrakesh (Morocco).
“Volume one (of the report) has laid out a clear path to achieve these objectives. Once the roadmap from the second report is established, concrete progress can be expected,” Sitharaman asserted, expressing optimism about these developments during India’s G20 Presidency.
One crucial aspect addressed in the initial section of the report is the necessity to increase MDBs’ annual spending by $3trillion by 2030. This funding includes $1.8 trillion designated for additional climate action and $1.2 trillion to achieve other sustainable development goals (SDGs).
Stress on reforms
Additionally, the report advocates for G20 members to review and endorse financing plans for each MDB and foster consensus on operational reforms that balance speed, scale, and safeguards by 2024, when Brazil assumes the presidency.
Sitharaman further revealed the four-fold agenda for India’s G20 Presidency, encompassing objectives like enhancing the agility of MDBs to tackle 21st century challenges; ensuring prompt resolution of debt and debt-related matters; establishing a global regulatory framework for crypto assets beyond central bank jurisdiction; and expanding digital infrastructure to meet growing demands.
Amidst these efforts, Sitharaman also emphasised the potential for alignment between the G20 and G7 on several issues, highlighting the possibility of generating action points through convergence of thought between the two groups.