
The stakes could not be higher in this global aid crisis
Leaders will soon gather in Sevilla, Spain, on a rescue mission: to help fix how the world invests in sustainable development.
The stakes could not be higher. A decade after the adoption of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals and many global commitments to finance them, two-thirds of the targets are lagging. And the world is falling short by more than $4 trillion annually to provide the resources developing countries need to deliver on these promises by 2030.
Meanwhile, the global economy is slowing, trade tensions are rising, aid budgets are being slashed while military spending soars, and international cooperation is under unprecedented strain.
The global development crisis is not abstract. It is measured in families going to bed hungry, children going unvaccinated, girls being forced to drop out of school and entire communities being deprived of basic services.
We must correct course. That begins on 30 June at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, where an ambitious, globally supported plan to invest in the Sustainable Development Goals must be adopted.
That plan should include three essential elements.
First, we must help accelerate the flow of resources to the countries who need it most. Fast. Countries must be in the driver's seat, mobilizing domestic resources by strengthening revenue collection and addressing tax evasion, money laundering and illicit financial flows through international cooperation. This would provide much-needed resources to prioritise spending on areas that provide the greatest impact such as education, healthcare, jobs, social protection, food security, and renewable energy.
At the same time, national development banks need to come together to finance major investments. To support this, the lending capacity of these banks needs to triple so developing countries can better access capital on affordable terms with longer timelines.
This increased access should include re-channeling of unconditional reserve assets — or Special Drawing Rights — to developing countries, preferably through Multilateral Development Banks, such as the World Bank, to multiply their impact.
Private investment is also essential. Resources can be unlocked by making it easier for private finance to support bankable development projects and by promoting solutions that mitigate currency risks and combine public and private finance more effectively. Throughout, donors must keep their development promises.
Second, we must fix the global debt system. It is unfair and broken. The current borrowing system is unsustainable, and developing countries have little confidence in it. It's easy to see why. Debt service is a steamroller crushing development gains, to the tune of more than $1.4 trillion (£1tn) a year. Many governments are forced to spend more on debt payments than on essentials like health and education combined.
The meeting next week must result in concrete steps to reduce borrowing costs, facilitate timely debt restructuring for countries burdened by unsustainable debt, and prevent debt crises from unfolding in the first place.
In advance of the conference, a number of countries have put forward proposals to ease the debt burden on developing countries. This includes making it easier to pause debt service in times of emergency; establishing a single debt registry to strengthen transparency; and improving how the IMF, World Bank and credit-ratings agencies assess risks in developing countries.
Finally, Seville must raise the voice and influence of developing countries in the international financial system so it better serves their needs.
International financial institutions must reform their governance structures to enable greater voice and participation of developing countries in the management of the institutions they depend on.
The world also needs a fairer global tax system, one shaped by all governments — not just the wealthiest and most powerful.
The creation of a 'borrowers club' for countries to coordinate their approaches and learn from one another is another promising step toward addressing power imbalances.
This finance conference is not about charity. It's about justice, and building a future in which countries can thrive, build, trade, and prosper together. In our increasingly interconnected world, a future of haves and have-nots is a recipe for even greater global insecurity that will keep weighing down progress for all.
With renewed global commitment and action, Seville can spark new momentum to restore a measure of faith in international cooperation and deliver on sustainable development for people and planet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Keir Starmer heads for crucial Nato summit TODAY vowing to hit new target for spending 3.5% of GDP on defence... but ministers refuse to say where the extra £30BILLION is coming from
Keir Starmer is heading for a crucial Nato summit today vowing to hit a new target for defence budgets. The PM will join fellow leaders from the military alliance in The Hague after signing up to the goal of spending 3.5 per cent of GDP on defence. Another 1.5 per cent will be committed to related measures such as cyber security, under the package demanded by Donald Trump. However, ministers have refused to say where the UK will find the extra money - around £30billion on top of existing plans - with Rachel Reeves already scrambling to balance the books. There are also claims that the figures are being fiddled and countries are watering down the pledges. A draft communique appears to have pushed back the timetable for hitting the level from 2032 to 2035. The language has also reportedly been watered down from 'we commit' to 'allies commit', with Spain flatly dismissing the idea of meeting the goal. Mr Trump himself has said America is not bound by it. 'We've been supporting NATO so long… So I don't think we should, but I think that the NATO countries should, absolutely,' he said on Friday. By contrast, Germany has said it will accelerate its spending to hit the core defence target by 2029 – six years early – amid growing global instability and the prospect of a war in the Middle East. That involves Berlin finding upwards of $60billion a year more for the military. The summit comes after Sir Keir's meeting yesterday with Volodymyr Zelensky at No10. The Ukrainian president will also be at the summit. The increase to 3.5 per cent in Italy would be equivalent to around $46billion a year, Canada $45billion, France £44billion and the UK roughly $40billion. Spain allocated just 1.24 per cent of GDP on defence in 2024. That could have left it facing funding a $36billion boost despite having a relatively small economy. But left-wing PM Pedro Sanchez said on Sunday that it was only looking to hit 2.1 per cent of GDP. 'We fully respect the legitimate desire of other countries to increase their defence investment, but we are not going to do so,' he said in a TV address. The cash cost of the goal for each country have been estimated by comparing the Nato figures for spending levels in 2024 to World Bank figures for the size of GDP. The current target is 2 per cent, which has not been met by all states. Only Poland currently tops the 3.5 per cent level. The US itself spent 3.38 per cent on defence in 2024, although the sheer size of its economy meant that dwarfed contributions from the rest of the alliance. Britain allocated 2.33 per cent of GDP to defence last year, and Keir Starmer has committed to reaching 2.5 per cent by April 2027. There is an 'ambition' of increasing that to 3 per cent at some stage in the next parliament - likely to run to 2034. Nato members effectively decide themselves whether they're hitting the 1.5 per cent element of the target, and there are fears Labour will try to include items not strictly related to defence. Downing Street sources said, for example, that it could include spending on beefing up energy security amid the switch to NetZero and fighting migrant-smuggling gangs. Former defence secretary Sir Ben Wallace posted on X: 'Tomorrow at the Nato summit we will witness the UK Government trying to con the US and Nato with spin on defence spending. 'By folding in other departments' spending and with no real defence £ increases, the PM will claim 5 per cent. 'The threat to our country is real not spin. This Government thinks it can use smoke and mirrors to deceive the public and Donald Trump. 'This is an insult to our troops who will see no significant new money. It fools no one.'


BreakingNews.ie
19 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
World leaders gather in the Netherlands for Nato summit
World leaders were gathering in the Netherlands on Tuesday for the start of a historic two-day Nato summit that could unite the world's biggest security organisation around a new defence spending pledge or widen divisions among the 32 allies. The allies are expected to endorse a goal of spending 5% of their gross domestic product on their security, to be able to fulfil the alliance's plans for defending against outside attack. Advertisement US President Donald Trump's first appearance at Nato since returning to the White House was supposed to centre on how the US secured the historic military spending pledge from others in the security alliance — effectively bending it to its will. Nato secretary general Mark Rutte addresses an audience on the sidelines of the summit in The Hague (Geert Vanden Wijngaert/AP) But in the spotlight instead is Mr Trump's decision to strike three nuclear enrichment facilities in Iran that the administration says eroded Tehran's nuclear ambitions, as well as the president's sudden announcement that Israel and Iran had reached a 'complete and total ceasefire'. Past Nato summits have focused almost entirely on the war in Ukraine, now in its fourth year. Nato secretary general Mark Rutte insisted that it remains a vital topic. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in The Hague for a series of meetings, despite his absence from a leaders' meeting aiming to seal the agreement to boost military spending. Advertisement It is a big change since the summit in Washington last year, when the military alliance's weighty communique included a vow to supply long-term security assistance to Ukraine, and a commitment to back the country 'on its irreversible path' to Nato membership. In a joint tribune on the eve of this year's summit, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said they backed US peace efforts that should preserve Ukraine's sovereignty and European security. 'For as long as the current trajectory lasts, Russia will find in France and Germany an unshakeable determination. What is at stake will determine European stability for the decades to come,' they wrote in the Financial Times. 'We will ensure that Ukraine emerges from this war prosperous, robust and secure, and will never live again under the fear of Russian aggression,' the two leaders wrote. Advertisement Ahead of the official programme, Mr Zelensky is scheduled to meet Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof. Later in the day, Mr Zelensky will address the Dutch parliament.


Reuters
20 minutes ago
- Reuters
Netherlands to send 175 million euros of military aid to Ukraine, expands drone cooperation
THE HAGUE, June 24 (Reuters) - The Netherlands will provide Ukraine with 100 drone-detection radars and 20 medical evacuation vehicles as part of a new 175 million euro ($202 million) aid package, Dutch Defence Minister Ruben Brekelmans said on Tuesday. Delivery of the radars, which will help identify incoming drones and relay data to air defence systems, is expected to be completed by year-end. In a statement on Friday, the Dutch Defence Ministry specified that 80 million euros of the package will go towards drone support through the international drone coalition. The move on Tuesday follows a 500 million euro deal to produce 600,000 drones with the Ukrainian defence industry, Brekelmans said ahead of a NATO Summit in The Hague. The Netherlands has pledged about 10 billion euros in military support for Ukraine since the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasionin early 2022. ($1 = 0.8629 euros)