A/RES/73/220 GA
International financial system and development : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
73
Session
184
Yes
1
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.2/73/L.12/Rev.1 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/73/220 |
| Category | ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND DEVELOPMENT FINANCE |
| Voeten Topics ⓘ | |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/73/220 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/73/PV.62
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Afghanistan
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Albania
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Algeria
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Andorra
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Angola
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Antigua and Barbuda
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Argentina
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Austria
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Azerbaijan
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Bahamas
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Bahrain
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Democratic People's Republic of Korea
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Dominica
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Ecuador
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Equatorial Guinea
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Eritrea
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Estonia
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Fiji
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Finland
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France
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Gabon
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Ghana
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Greece
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Grenada
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Guinea
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Haiti
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Hungary
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Iceland
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India
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Indonesia
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Iraq
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Kenya
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Latvia
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Niger
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Oman
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Pakistan
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Peru
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Philippines
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Poland
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Portugal
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Qatar
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Republic of Korea
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Moldova
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Romania
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Russian Federation
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Saint Kitts and Nevis
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Saint Lucia
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Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
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Samoa
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San Marino
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Saudi Arabia
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Senegal
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Serbia
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Singapore
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Slovenia
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Solomon Islands
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South Africa
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Spain
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Sudan
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Switzerland
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Uzbekistan
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Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
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Viet Nam
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Yemen
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Zambia
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Zimbabwe
Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/73/220
General Assembly
Distr.: General
9 January 2019
18-22540 (E) 110119
*1822540*
Seventy-third session
Agenda item 18 (b)
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 20 December 2018
[on the report of the Second Committee (A/73/536/Add.2)]
73/220. International financial system and development
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolutions 55/186 of 20 December 2000 and 56/181 of
21 December 2001, entitled “Towards a strengthened and stable international financial
architecture responsive to the priorities of growth and development, especially in
developing countries, and to the promotion of economic and social equity”, as well
as its resolutions 57/241 of 20 December 2002, 58/202 of 23 December 2003, 59/222
of 22 December 2004, 60/186 of 22 December 2005, 61/187 of 20 December 2006,
62/185 of 19 December 2007, 63/205 of 19 December 2008, 64/190 of 21 December
2009, 65/143 of 20 December 2010, 66/187 of 22 December 2011, 67/197 of
21 December 2012, 68/201 of 20 December 2013, 69/206 of 19 December 2014, 70/188
of
22 December
2015,
71/215
of
21 December
2016
and
72/203
of
20 December 2017,
Reaffirming its resolution 70/1 of 25 September 2015, entitled “Transforming
our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”, in which it adopted a
comprehensive, far-reaching and people-centred set of universal and transformative
Sustainable Development Goals and targets, its commitment to working tirelessly for
the full implementation of the Agenda by 2030, its recognition that eradicating
poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest
global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development, its
commitment to achieving sustainable development in its three dimensions —
economic, social and environmental — in a balanced and integrated manner, and to
building upon the achievements of the Millennium Development Goals and seeking
to address their unfinished business,
Reaffirming also its resolution 69/313 of 27 July 2015 on the Addis Ababa
Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development,
which is an integral part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, supports
and complements it, helps to contextualize its means of implementation targets with
concrete policies and actions, and reaffirms the strong political commitment to
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address the challenge of financing and creating an enabling environment at all levels
for sustainable development in the spirit of global partnership and solidarity,
Recalling the Doha Declaration on Financing for Development: outcome
document of the Follow-up International Conference on Financing for Development
to Review the Implementation of the Monterrey Consensus, held in Doha from
29 November to 2 December 2008,1
Recalling also the United Nations Millennium Declaration, 2 its resolution
56/210 B of 9 July 2002, in which it endorsed the Monterrey Consensus of the
International Conference on Financing for Development, 3 the Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development, 4 Agenda 21, 5 the Programme for the Further
Implementation of Agenda 216 and the Plan of Implementation of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development,7
Recalling further the Conference on the World Financial and Economic Crisis
and Its Impact on Development and its outcome document, 8 recognizing the work
undertaken by the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group of the General Assembly to
follow up on the issues contained in the Outcome of the Conference, and taking note
of its progress report,9
Recalling the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, held in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 20 to 22 June 2012, and its outcome document, entitled
“The future we want”,10
Appreciating the fact that the Summit of the Group of 20, held in Hangzhou,
China, on 4 and 5 September 2016, the first Summit of the Group of 20 to take place
in a developing country following the adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development, with the broad participation of developing countries, including the
Chair of the Group of 77, endorsed the Group of 20 Action Plan on the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development as an important contribution to the global
implementation of the 2030 Agenda, recalling that the Summit of the Group of 20,
held in Hamburg, Germany, on 7 and 8 July 2017, endorsed the Hamburg Update:
Taking Forward the Group of 20 Action Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development, and looking forward to their implementation, while urging the Group
of 20 to continue to engage in an inclusive and transparent manner with other States
Members of the United Nations in its work in order to ensure that the initiatives of
the Group of 20 complement or strengthen the United Nations system,
Noting the holding of the twenty-second Saint Petersburg International
Economic Forum in Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation, from 24 to 26 May 2018,
__________________
1 Resolution 63/239, annex.
2 Resolution 55/2.
3 Report of the International Conference on Financing for Development, Monterrey, Mexico,
18−22 March 2002 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.02.II.A.7), chap. I, resolution 1,
annex.
4 Report of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, Rio de Janeiro,
3−14 June 1992, vol. I, Resolutions Adopted by the Conference (United Nations publication,
Sales No. E.93.I.8 and corrigendum), resolution 1, annex I.
5 Ibid., annex II.
6 Resolution S-19/2, annex.
7 Report of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Johannesburg, South Africa, 26 August–
4 September 2002 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.03.II.A.1 and corrigendum), chap. I,
resolution 2, annex.
8 Resolution 63/303, annex.
9 A/64/884.
10 Resolution 66/288, annex.
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Recognizing that the remaining effects of the world financial and economic
crisis have the potential to undermine debt sustainability and progress towards
achieving the internationally agreed development goals, especially in developing
countries, and stressing the need to avoid the recurrence of such crises, including by
addressing the lessons learned, improving confidence, sustaining economic growth
and promoting full and productive employment and decent work for all women and
men, including young people, older persons and people with disabilities, and by
continuing to promote global economic stability and the underlying institutional
reforms required to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals,
Expressing concern about the adverse impact of the continuing fragility of the
global economy, the slow pace of the restoration of global growth and trade,
increasing protectionism and inward-looking policies, with increasing systemic risks
that threaten financial stability, including in developing countries,
Reaffirming the purposes of the United Nations, as set forth in its Charter,
including to achieve international cooperation in solving international problems of an
economic, social, cultural or humanitarian character and to be a centre for
harmonizing the actions of nations in the attainment of common ends, and reiterating
the need to strengthen the leadership role of the United Nations in promoting
development,
Recognizing the contribution of the original and reconvened Panel of Eminent
Persons of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in the context
of the United Nations sustainable development pillar and United Nations reform, as
well as the contribution of the United Nations system to sustainable finance and
investments in the Sustainable Development Goals, and recognizing also the
contribution of the independent team of advisers to the Economic and Social Council
dialogue on the longer-term positioning of the United Nations development system in
the context of the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,
Emphasizing that the international financial system should bolster sustainable,
inclusive and sustained economic growth, sustainable development and job creation,
promote financial inclusion and support efforts to eradicate poverty in all its forms
and dimensions, including extreme poverty, and hunger, in particular in developing
countries, while allowing for the coherent mobilization of all sources of financing for
development,
Taking note of the work of the United Nations in the area of external debt
sustainability and development,
Recognizing the importance of scaling up international tax cooperation, and in
this regard welcoming the work of the Committee of Experts on International
Cooperation in Tax Matters and the support to tax authorities of developing countries
through the Addis Tax Initiative, which contribute to the mobilization of domestic
resources for the Sustainable Development Goals and the curbing of illicit financial
flows and tax evasion,
Recognizing also the need to reduce mechanistic reliance on credit-rating
agency assessments, including in regulations, and to promote increased competition
as well as measures to avoid conflict of interest in the provision of credit ratings in
order to improve the quality of ratings, acknowledging the efforts of the Financial
Stability Board and others in this area, expressing support for establishing greater
transparency requirements for evaluation standards of credit-rating agencies, and
affirming the commitment to continue ongoing work on these issues,
Acknowledging the 2016 implementation of quota and governance reforms at
the International Monetary Fund and the 2018 agreement on shareholding reforms at
the World Bank Group, including a general capital increase, a selective capital
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increase and a financial sustainability framework, and acknowledging also that, in
October 2016, the Chinese renminbi officially became the fifth currency in the special
drawing rights basket, pursuant to the decision taken by the Executive Board of the
Fund in November 2015,
1.
Takes note of the report of the Secretary-General;11
2.
Recognizes the need to continue and intensify efforts to enhance the
coherence and consistency of the international monetary, financial and trading systems,
reiterates the importance of ensuring their openness, fairness and inclusiveness in
order to complement national efforts to ensure sustainable development, including
strong, sustained, balanced, inclusive and equitable economic growth, and that all
men and women, in particular the poor and vulnerable, have equal rights to economic
resources and appropriate financial services, and the achievement of the
internationally agreed development goals, including the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development,12 and encourages the international financial institutions to align their
programmes and policies with the 2030 Agenda in accordance with their mandates;
3.
Notes that the United Nations, on the basis of its universal membership
and legitimacy, provides a unique and key forum for discussing international
economic issues and their impact on development, and reaffirms that the United
Nations is well positioned to participate in various reform processes aimed at
improving and strengthening the effective functioning of the international financial
system and architecture, while recognizing that the United Nations and the
international financial institutions have complementary mandates that make the
coordination of their actions crucial;
4.
Recognizes the important efforts undertaken nationally, regionally and
internationally to respond to the challenges posed by the latest global financial and
economic crisis, and also recognizes that more needs to be done in order to promote
the economic recovery, to manage the consequences of volatility in global financial
and commodity markets, to tackle high unemployment and indebtedness in several
countries, as well as widespread fiscal strains, to reinforce the banking sector,
including by increasing its transparency and accountability, to address systemic
fragilities and imbalances, to reform and strengthen the international financial system
and to continue and to enhance the coordination of financial and economic policies at
the international level;
5.
Stresses the critical importance of a stable, inclusive and enabling global
economic environment for the advancement of sustainable development, for the
reliable and effective financing of development and for the implementation of the
2030 Agenda, mobilizing public and private, as well as domestic and international
resources;
6.
Reiterates that debtors and creditors must work together in a transparent
manner to prevent and resolve unsustainable debt situations and that maintaining
sustainable debt levels is the responsibility of the borrowing countries, acknowledging,
however, that lenders also have a responsibility to lend in a way that does not
undermine a country’s debt sustainability, and in this regard takes note of the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development principles on responsible sovereign
lending and borrowing and recognizes the applicable requirements of the International
Monetary Fund debt limits policy and/or the World Bank non-concessional borrowing
policy, as well as the safeguards of the Development Assistance Committee of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in its statistical system to
enhance the debt sustainability of recipient countries, and will work towards a global
__________________
11 A/73/280.
12 Resolution 70/1.
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consensus on guidelines for debtor and creditor responsibilities in borrowing by and
lending to sovereigns, building on existing initiatives;
7.
Invites, in this regard, the President of the General Assembly and the
Secretary-General to give appropriate consideration to the central role of maintaining
and facilitating the financial and macroeconomic stability of developing countries,
including debt sustainability, and of supporting an appropriately enabling domestic
and international economic, financial and regulatory environment for the means of
implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, including financial
inclusion, and in this regard invites all major institutional stakeholders, including the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development, to support these efforts, in accordance with their respective
mandates;
8.
Encourages, in this regard, the Economic and Social Council to consider,
at its annual forum on financing for development follow-up, a discussion and analysis
of systemic issues and challenges, taking into account the roles of the international
financial institutions, including the International Monetary Fund, and of the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development, in accordance with their respective
mandates, pursuant to the relevant resolutions on this matter, including its resolution
69/313 on the Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on
Financing for Development and the mandate of the annual forum on financing for
development follow-up set out therein;
9.
Resolves to strengthen the coherence and consistency of multilateral
financial, investment, trade and development policy and environment institutions and
platforms and to increase cooperation between major international institutions, while
respecting mandates and governance structures, and commits itself to taking better
advantage of relevant United Nations forums for promoting universal and holistic
coherence and international commitments to sustainable development, building on
the vision of the Monterrey Consensus, with a view to supporting the implementation
of the Addis Ababa Action Agenda and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development;
10. Recalls that countries must have the flexibility necessary to implement
countercyclical measures and pursue tailored and targeted responses to the various
types of shocks, including economic and financial crises, and calls for conditionalities
to be streamlined to ensure that they are timely, tailored and targeted and that they
support developing countries in the face of financial, economic and development
challenges;
11.
Notes, in this regard, the increase in resources and the improvement of the
lending framework of the International Monetary Fund through, inter alia, streamlined
conditions and flexible instruments, such as the precautionary and liquidity line, the
flexible credit line and the rapid financing instrument, and the refinement of the
lending framework for low-income countries, while also noting that new and ongoing
programmes should not contain unwarranted procyclical conditionalities;
12. Invites the multilateral development banks and other international
development banks to continue to provide both concessional and non-concessional,
stable, long-term development finance by leveraging contributions and capital and by
mobilizing resources for developing countries from multiple sources, for example
from capital markets, and stresses that development banks should make optimal use
of their resources and balance sheets, consistent with maintaining their financial
integrity, and should update and develop their policies in support of the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development, including the Sustainable Development Goals, as
appropriate;
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13. Welcomes, in this regard, the ongoing work of the New Development Bank
and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank in the global development finance
architecture, and encourages enhanced regional and subregional cooperation,
including through regional and subregional development banks, commercial and
reserve currency arrangements and other regional and subregional initiatives;
14. Encourages, in this regard, the multilateral development banks to continue
to move forward on flexible, concessional, fast-disbursing and front-loaded assistance
that will substantially and quickly assist developing countries facing financing gaps
in their efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, taking into
consideration the individual absorptive capacities and debt sustainability of those
countries;
15. Also encourages multilateral development banks, within their respective
mandates, to continue to expand technical assistance, disseminate and share their
knowledge and best practices and enhance the multiplier effect of their financing by
leveraging more resources from more sources, including by mobilizing private
investment, to provide innovative and integral solutions to multidimensional
development problems, in particular in developing and emerging economies;
16. Emphasizes the relevance of inclusion in the international financial system
at all levels and the importance of considering financial inclusion as a policy objective
in financial regulation, in accordance with national priorities and legislation;
17. Recognizes that it is important that the International Monetary Fund
continue to be adequately resourced, and supports and reiterates its commitment to
further governance reform at both the Fund and the World Bank to adapt to changes
in the global economy;
18. Calls for the completion of the fifteenth general review of quotas of the
International Monetary Fund, including a new quota formula, at the meetings of the
Fund and the World Bank Group to be held in the spring of 2019, and no later than at
the annual meetings of the Fund and the Group in 2019, emphasizes that the new
quota formula, as a basis for a realignment of quota shares, will result in increased
shares for dynamic economies in line with their relative positions in the world
economy and hence likely in the share of emerging market and developing countries
as a whole, while protecting the voice and representation of the poorest members, and
supports the continued examination of the broader use of special drawing rights as a
way to enhance the resilience of the international monetary system;
19. Acknowledges the importance of the international financial institutions
supporting, in line with their mandates, the policy space of each country, while
remaining consistent with relevant international rules and commitments, in particular
developing countries, and recommits to the broadening and strengthening of the voice
and participation of developing countries, including African countries, the least
developed countries, landlocked developing countries, small island developing
States, middle-income countries and countries in conflict and post-conflict situations,
in international economic decision-making, norm-setting and global economic
governance;
20. Reaffirms that cohesive, nationally owned sustainable development
strategies, supported by integrated national financing frameworks, will be at the heart
of efforts, reiterates that each country has primary responsibility for its own economic
and social development and that the role of national policies and development
strategies cannot be overemphasized, expresses respect for each country’s policy
space and leadership to implement policies for the eradication of poverty in all its
forms and dimensions and for sustainable development, while remaining consistent
with relevant international rules and commitments, at the same time recognizes that
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national development efforts need to be supported by an enabling international
economic environment, including coherent and mutually supporting world trade,
monetary and financial systems and strengthened and enhanced global economic
governance, and that processes to develop and facilitate the availability of appropriate
knowledge and technologies globally, as well as capacity-building, are also critical,
and commits to pursuing policy coherence and an enabling environment for
sustainable development at all levels and by all actors, and to reinvigorating the
Global Partnership for Sustainable Development;
21. Recommits to a redoubling of its efforts to substantially reduce illicit
financial flows by 2030, with a view to eventually eliminating them, including by
combating tax evasion and corruption through strengthened national regulation and
increased international cooperation;
22. Recognizes the role of special drawing rights as an international reserve
asset, acknowledges that special drawing rights allocations helped to supplement
international reserves in response to the world financial and economic crisis, thus
contributing to the stability of the international financial system and global economic
resilience, and supports the continued examination of the broader use of special
drawing rights as a way to enhance the resilience of the international monetary
system, including with reference to their potential role in the international reserve
system;
23. Takes note of the work by the Financial Stability Board on financial market
reform, commits to sustaining or strengthening frameworks for macroprudential
regulation and countercyclical buffers, reaffirms the commitment to hasten
completion of the reform agenda on financial market regulation, including assessing
and if necessary reducing the systemic risks associated with non-bank financial
intermediation, markets for derivatives, securities lending and repurchase
agreements, and also reaffirms the commitment to addressing the risk created by “too-
big-to-fail” financial institutions and to addressing cross-border elements in effective
resolution of troubled, systemically important financial institutions;
24. Reiterates that effective, inclusive multilateral surveillance should be at
the centre of crisis prevention efforts, stresses the need to continue to strengthen
surveillance of the financial policies of countries, and in this regard notes the current
efforts to update the surveillance approach of the International Monetary Fund to
better integrate bilateral and multilateral surveillance, along with cross-border and
cross-sectoral linkages with macroeconomic and macroprudential policies, while
paying closer attention to the spillover effects from national economic and financial
policies onto the global economy;
25. Also reiterates the need to resolve to reduce mechanistic reliance on credit-
rating agency assessments, including in regulations and to promote increased
competition as well as measures to avoid conflict of interest in the provision of credit
ratings;
26. Invites the international financial and banking institutions to continue to
enhance the transparency and analytical rigour of risk-rating mechanisms, noting that
sovereign risk assessments should maximize the use of objective and transparent
parameters, which can be facilitated by high-quality data and analysis, and
encourages relevant institutions, including the United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development, to continue their work on the issue, including the potential impact
of the role played by private credit rating agencies on the development prospects of
developing countries, in accordance with their mandates;
27. Welcomes efforts by new development banks to develop safeguard systems
in open consultation with stakeholders on the basis of established international
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standards, and encourages all development banks to establish or maintain social and
environmental safeguard systems, including on human rights, gender equality and
women’s empowerment, that are transparent, effective, efficient and time-sensitive;
28. Recognizes the need for the international financial institutions, as
appropriate, to promote gender mainstreaming in their policies and programmes,
including macroeconomic, job creation and structural reform policies and
programmes, in accordance with relevant national priorities and strategies;
29. Urges multilateral donors, and invites international financial institutions
and regional development banks, within their respective mandates, to review and
implement policies that support national efforts to ensure that a higher proportion of
resources reaches women and girls, in particular in rural and remote areas;
30. Recommits itself to enabling women’s full and equal participation in the
economy and their equal access to decision-making processes and leadership;
31. Reiterates that States are strongly urged to refrain from promulgating and
applying any unilateral economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with
international law and the Charter of the United Nations that impede the full
achievement of economic and social development, particularly in developing
countries;
32. Requests, in this regard, the Secretary-General to submit to the General
Assembly at its seventy-fourth session a report on the implementation of the present
resolution with input from the major institutional stakeholders, including the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development, in accordance with their respective mandates;
33. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its seventy-fourth session,
under the item entitled “Macroeconomic policy questions”, the sub-item entitled
“International financial system and development”, unless otherwise agreed.
62nd plenary meeting
20 December 2018
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