António Guterres (UN Secretary-General) at the Opening of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development FFD4 (Sevilla, Spain)
<div><div>"Your Majesties,<p>Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,</p><p>I thank the Government and people of Spain for welcoming us to Sevilla for this important conference.</p><p>For decades, the mission of sustainable development has united countries large and small, developed and developing.</p><p>Together, we achieved progress.</p><p>Reducing global poverty and hunger.</p><p>Saving lives with stronger health care systems.</p><p>Getting more children into school.</p><p>Expanding opportunities for women and girls.</p><p>And strengthening social safety nets.</p><p>But today, development and its great enabler — international cooperation — are facing massive headwinds.</p><p>We are living in a world where trust is fraying and multilateralism is strained.</p><p>A world with a slowing economy, rising trade tensions, and decimated aid budgets.</p><p>A world shaken by inequalities, climate chaos and raging conflicts.</p><p>The link between peace and development is clear.</p><p>Nine of the ten countries with the lowest Human Development Indicators are currently in a state of conflict.</p><p>Excellencies,</p><p>Financing is the engine of development.</p><p>And right now, this engine is sputtering.</p><p>As we meet, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development — our global promise to transform our world for a better, fairer future — is in danger.</p><p>Two-thirds of the Sustainable Development Goals targets are lagging.</p><p>Achieving them requires an investment of more than $4 trillion a year.</p><p>But this is not just a crisis of numbers.</p><p>It’s a crisis of people.</p><p>Of families going hungry.</p><p>Of children going unvaccinated.</p><p>Of girls forced to drop out of school.</p><p>We are here in Sevilla to change course.</p><p>To repair and rev up the engine of development to accelerate investment at the scale and speed required.</p><p>And to restore a measure of fairness and justice for all.</p><p>Excellencies,</p><p>The Sevilla Commitment document is a global promise to fix how the world supports countries as they climb the development ladder.</p><p>I see three areas of action.</p><p>First — we must get resources flowing. Fast.</p><p>Countries must lead by mobilizing domestic resources and investing in areas of greatest impact: schools, health care, social protection, decent work, and renewable energy.</p><p>Unlocking these investments requires strengthening tax systems, and tackling illicit financial flows and tax evasion.</p><p>And helping developing countries dedicate a greater share of their tax revenues to the systems people need.</p><p>The Sevilla Commitment’s call on developed countries to double their aid dedicated to domestic resource mobilization can support this.</p><p>Multilateral and national development banks must unite to finance major investments.</p><p>This includes tripling the lending capacity of Multilateral Development Banks — and rechanneling Special Drawing Rights that can unlock lending capacity and help developing countries boost investment.</p><p>We also need innovative financing solutions to unlock private capital.</p><p>Solutions that mitigate currency risks;</p><p>That combine public and private finance more effectively, and ensure the risks and rewards of development projects are shared by both the public and private sectors;</p><p>And that ensure financial regulations assess risk appropriately and support investments in frontier markets.</p><p>Second — we must fix the global debt system which is unsustainable, unfair and unaffordable.</p><p>With annual debt service at $1.4 trillion, countries need — and deserve — a system that lowers borrowing costs, enables fair and timely debt-restructuring, and prevents debt crises in the first place.</p><p>The Sevilla Commitment lays the groundwork:</p><p>By creating a single debt registry for transparency, and promoting responsible lending and borrowing;</p><p>By lowering the cost of capital through debt swaps and debt management support;</p><p>And through debt service pauses in times of emergency.</p><p>And third — we must increase the participation of developing countries in the institutions of the global financial architecture. The present major shareholders have a role to play recognizing the importance of correcting injustices and adapting to a changing world.</p><p>A new borrowers forum will give voice to borrowers for fairer debt resolution and can foster transparency, shared learning and coordinated debt action.</p><p>And we need a fairer global tax system shaped by all, not just a few.</p><p>Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,</p><p>This conference is not about charity.</p><p>It’s about restoring justice and lives of dignity.</p><p>This conference is not about money.</p><p>It’s about investing in the future we want to build, together.</p><p>Thank you all for being part of this important and ambitious effort".</p></div></div>