Authors
Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union, European Parliament, Oppel, Annalena, McNabb, Kyle, Gupta, Sanjeev, Brown, Hannah, Plant, Mark, Camps Adrogue, Bernat
Related Organizations
- Catalogue number
- QA-05-24-475-EN-N QA-05-24-475-EN-C
- Citation
- European Parliament, Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union, Oppel, A., McNabb, K., Gupta, S. et al., Confronting debt, climate change and poverty – Global financial architecture reform and the fiscal space of developing countries , Publications Office of the European Union, 2024, https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/775020
- DOI
- https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/204492 https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/775020
- ISBN
- 978-92-848-1965-2
- Pages
- 81
- Published in
- Belgium
- Themes
- Economy — Finance , Development policy
Table of Contents
- List of abbreviations 8
- List of figures 8
- 1 How does fiscal space matter for poverty and inequality reductions? 9
- 1.1 External policies 10
- 1.2 Domestic policies 12
- 2 Three influences on fiscal space’s ability to produce poverty and/or inequality reductions 13
- 2.1 The political economy – choices and priorities 13
- 2.2 Methodology, measurements, and timeframes 15
- 2.3 Continued disempowerment? 16
- 3 Thinking ahead 17
- 3.1 Horizontality and trust-based partnerships 17
- 3.2 Supporting comprehensive digitisation 18
- 3.3 Understanding and setting expectations 19
- 4 References 20
- Fiscal space_Briefing_Fiscal space_Final lay-out.pdf -1
- List of abbreviations 27
- List of figures 27
- 1 Definition and assessment 28
- 1.1 Growth and productive spending and their impact on fiscal space 28
- 1.2 Pandemics and fiscal space 29
- 1.3 Demographics and fiscal space 31
- 1.4 Climate change and fiscal space 31
- 2 Expanding fiscal space 31
- 2.1 Collect more revenues 31
- 2.2 Rationalise expenditures 33
- 2.3 Strengthening debt management 34
- 3 Development policy, global economic governance and fiscal space 35
- 3.1 The European Union and key Member States’ stance 35
- 3.2 Perspectives of the Global South 35
- 4 Recommendations 36
- 5 References 38
- Fiscal space_Briefing_IMF SDR_Final lay-out.pdf -1
- List of abbreviations 43
- List of tables 43
- List of figures 43
- 1 Special drawing rights: History, issuance and allocation 44
- 1.1 Context and historical overview 44
- 1.2 Issuance and allocation 44
- 1.3 The role of SDRs in development finance 46
- 1.4 Applications of SDR allocations: how did countries use their SDRs to recover from the pandemic? 47
- 1.5 The recycling to MDBs proposal 48
- 1.5.1 African Development Bank and inter-American Development Bank hybrid capital 49
- 1.5.2 SDR-denominated bond 50
- 2 SDRs as a development policy tool 50
- 2.1 The EU and Member States’ stance on IMF and SDRs in development policy 50
- 2.2 Reforms suggested by the United Nations High-Level Advisory Board on Effective Multilateralism 51
- 3 Recommendations for the EP and the DEVE Committee 52
- 4 References 53
- 5 Annexes 56
- Annex 1: EU Member States’ holdings of SDRs, allocation and recycling commitments (in billions of SDRs, as of 31 December 2023) 56
- Annex 2: World Bank Classification of Countries for the 2024 fiscal year 57
- Annex 3: List of prescribed holders of SDRs (20 members as of January 2024) 60
- Annex 4: IMF emerging markets list of countries 61
- Fiscal Space_Workshop proceedings_Final lay-out.pdf -1
- 1 Workshop programme 66
- 2 Introduction 68
- 3 Presentation by academic experts 68
- 3.1 Dr Abel Gwaindepi, Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute of International Studies 68
- 3.2 Dr Sanjeev Gupta, Senior Fellow Emeritus, Center for Global Development 71
- 3.3 Professor Mark Plant, Senior Policy Fellow, Center for Global Development 72
- 3.4 Dr Annalena Oppel, London School of Economics 72
- 4 Debate with members 73
- 5 Concluding remarks 76