Prime Minister Imran Khan has proposed a ten-point agenda to world leaders to avert economic collapse due to the Covid-19 pandemic and called for debt suspension, drawing rights of USD $500 billion and return of stolen assets stashed in rich countries.
He was virtually addressing the U.N. General Assembly’s two-day special session on the response to the deadly coronavirus pandemic and forge a united path forward to better recovery, including access to a vaccine.
He said developing countries are facing a dilemma how to stimulate the economy and yet at the same time reduce budget deficit.
Imran Khan said the only way we can have the fiscal space to maintain and revive growth is through access to additional liquidity.
Underlining the need for reforming the international financial architecture, he called for building an inclusive and equitable debt management mechanism, constructing a democratic and SDG-focused trading system, and installing a fair international tax regime.
Besides, the Prime Minister also proposed concessional financing to lower income countries through multilateral development banks; provision of loans at lower costs, mobilizing 100 billion US dollars per year for climate action in developing countries, and halting of illicit financial outflows from developing to rich countries.
He proposed a ten-point agenda for urgent action, which called for;
- Debt suspension till the end of the pandemic for low income and most stressed countries.
- Cancellation of debt of least developed countries.
- Restructuring of the public sector debt of other developing countries under an agreed inclusive multilateral framework.
- A general allocation of special drawing rights of $500 billion.
- Expanded concessional financing to lower income countries through multilateral development banks.
- Creation of a new ‘liquidity and sustainability facility’, which should provide short term loans at lower costs.
- Fulfilment of the 0.7 % official development assistance commitments.
- Mobilizing the required $1.5 trillion annual investment in sustainable infrastructure.
- Achievement of the agreed target of mobilizing $100 billion per year for climate action in developing countries.
- Immediate action to stop the massive illicit financial outflows from developing countries to rich countries, to offshore tax havens and at the same time, immediate return of their assets stolen by corrupt politicians and criminals back to these countries.