UN Official Warns $31trn Debt Is Stifling Development in Poorer Nations

New York: UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) Secretary-General, Rebeca Grynspan, says the 31 trillion dollar burden is stifling the development of developing countries.

The UN trade official said this on Monday while addressing UNCTAD’s 195 Member States in Geneva.

Grynspan, however, said that holding the line on the existing rules-based international trading system remains an essential challenge if the world is to keep a damaging tariff war at bay.

She said that 72 per cent of global trade “still moves under WTO rules” – a reference to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), whose agreements are negotiated and signed by trading nations.

“We have for now avoided the domino effect of tariff escalation that once brought the world economy to its knees in the 1930s,” Grynspan told UNCTAD members gathering in Geneva to continue efforts to lift millions out of poverty through trade.

“This didn’t happen by accident, it happened because of you, because you kept negotiating when it seemed pointless, defending a rules-based system even as you were to reform it, and building bridges even when they fell.”

The UNCTAD chief’s comments follow months of global economic uncertainty amid declarations of tariff impositions on the United States’ trading partners.

In recent comments, Grynspan said that rising tariffs, record debt repayments by heavily indebted nations and growing mistrust were all halting development.

“A debt and development crisis is still facing countries with impossible choices,” she said. “They have to decide: to default on their debt or on their development.”

Grynspan recently told the UN General Assembly that tariffs applied by major economies, including the United States, have jumped this year from an average of 2.8 per cent to more than 20 per cent.

“Uncertainty is the highest tariff possible,” she said, adding that it “discourages investment, slows growth and makes trade as a path to development much harder.”

In Geneva, the UNCTAD top economist warned that global investment flows are retreating for the second year in a row, “eroding tomorrow’s growth.”

At the same time, today’s investment system favours projects in more prosperous economies rather than developing nations, she continued, with one U.S. dollar “three times more expensive in Zambia than in Zurich.”

Grynspan also stressed that freight costs are now “too volatile” with landlocked countries and small island developing states hit with transport bills “up to three times the global average.”

And while AI offered the prospect of adding “trillions” to global GDP, the UNCTAD Secretary-General said that fewer than one in three developing countries have strategies to capture its benefits.

A staggering 2.6 billion people remain offline, most of them women in developing countries, UN data indicates.

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