ArmInfo.Within the framework of his official visit to the Kingdom of Spain, President of the Republic of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan delivered a speech in the UN International Conference on Financing for Development.
At the outset, I would like to express my gratitude to the Government of Spain for hosting this important international event and for its generous hospitality.
In these turbulent times, when the world is grappling with unprecedented challenges, it is more than ever necessary to joint our efforts and demonstrate solidarity and strong political will to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
10 years ago, building on the commitments achieved in Monterrey and Doha, we adopted the Addis Ababa Action Agenda, an ambitious and overarching document, shaping a set of guidelines and concrete tools to reform the global financing system with the aim of leaving no one behind. However, despite significant achievements, we still face more questions than answers.
Global challenges that have emerged in recent years, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, the increasing impact of climate change, rising geopolitical tensions, growing number of conflicts, have revealed serious gaps in the Addis Ababa Action Agenda, requiring immediate actions to further advance the reform of the international financial architecture and adapt it to new realities. The decline in official development assistance has had devastating consequences for developing countries, threatening to reverse their hard-won progress.
The worrying trends in the global development agenda have a particularly severe impact on countries in special situations: least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and Small Island developing states, whose systemic vulnerabilities hinder the efforts to achieve Sustainable Development Goals.
The situation is also difficult for the middle-income countries, often finding themselves in the middle- income trap, due to the shortcomings of the current international financial system.
Take my country as an example. Armenia is classified as an upper-middle income country. At the same time, Armenia is a landlocked developing country, facing multidimensional challenges, such as the influx of 115,000 refugees forcibly displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh, making up 4 percent of the country's total population, the reoccurring disasters caused by climate change, difficulties with access to global markets and value chains. However, Armenia is forced to focus its limited resources on servicing its national debt exceeding $13 billion, rather than investing in humanitarian, climate mitigation and sustainable development needs.
In this context, we believe that targeted and action-oriented steps are essential to overcome current inequalities and systematic gaps in the international financial architecture. Armenia strongly advocates the introduction of complementary criteria beyond GDP, reducing dependence on earmarked financing and strengthening the capacities of the United Nations Development System for a timely and efficient response to the needs of countries and people in vulnerable situations.
Support from international community to strengthen democratic institutions, promote good governance, ensure transparency and uphold the rule of law is important to bring countries in special situations and middle-income countries back on track towards sustainable development. It is crucial to ensure equal and fair access to new technologies, close the digital divide and mobilize the necessary resources to address climate change, biodiversity loss and desertification. As the host of the 17th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biodiversity next year, Armenia is ready to work closely with all partners to fill the gaps in biodiversity financing.
Armenia welcomes the consensus over the Outcome document, which signals the readiness of all parties to work together to turn the promises and commitments into real actions to bring transformative changes on the ground.
We hope that the Compromiso de Sevilla, with its forward-looking commitments, will provide new impetus to the efforts of international community to reform the international financial architecture, enhance its resilience and effectiveness and make financial resources more accessible and affordable for the most vulnerable.
I wish the participants fruitful and result-oriented deliberations.