Werner Hoyer: The European Union needs to reinforce its development financing activities in order to level the playing field with the United States and China. Establishing its own development bank would have an immediate, significant, and resource-efficient impact.
With nationalist tendencies currently resurgent around the world, Europe
can and must place itself at the forefront of the issues that matter
most. From promoting trade and human rights to mitigating disease and
climate change, Europe can be a global beacon, fostering the kind of
multilateralism that is at the heart of the European Union.
As French President
Emmanuel Macron put it at the United Nations General Assembly in September, Europe
must engage
in “building new solutions, because we are not collectively condemned
to a dance of power which would, in a way, reduce us to being the sorry
spectators of collective powerlessness.”A strong global role requires
strong policy coherence in the EU’s approach to development.
The
COVID-19 crisis has derailed global development goals and could push 100 million additional people globally into extreme poverty, according to the World Bank. A powerful European voice in development is therefore a moral imperative.Such
a stance is also in Europe’s own interest. While developing countries
are grappling with the pandemic’s health and economic consequences, none
of their existing security threats and challenges have abated. There
are already indications that violence is increasing in fragile or
conflict-afflicted regions, such as the Sahel and Iraq.
Meanwhile, the
devastating impact of climate change on developing countries demands
that Europe strengthen its international role. We know that European
actions alone will not change the direction of global warming. After
all, Europe’s carbon-dioxide emissions are less than one-third of Asia’s.
To address the impact of climate change, we must reach beyond our
borders, learn lessons, share our expertise, and cooperate with green
investors everywhere. A coherent climate strategy must be a key building
block of an effective European development strategy.
This requires
Europe to think big on development, and go beyond the EU’s four current
strands of development finance activity. The bloc participates in global
organizations like the World Bank, as well as in entities with a
regional focus, such as the African Development Bank and the European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development. It also finances development
bilaterally, through the European Investment Bank (EIB), and nationally,
through institutions such as the Agence Française de Développement.
Europe must continue
to be engaged on all four fronts. But in a world of increasingly
divergent national interests, the EU must also strengthen its strategic
autonomy to promote its priorities and values internationally. On
strategically important issues such as climate change, human rights, the
transformation of global value chains, or migration, we cannot sit back
and wait for the United States, China, or Russia to act. Moreover,
unilateral actions by individual EU countries would be insufficient,
inefficient, and even counterproductive for Europe.
The EU needs to
speak with a clear voice – as other global powers do already. China has
not only founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, but also
massively increased the resources and commitments of its bilateral
development institution, the China Development Bank, under President Xi
Jinping’s signature Belt and Road Initiative. Alarmingly, while China
has introduced some restrictions on fossil-fuel investment at home, its
overseas investment shows a pronounced tendency toward financing coal
and gas projects. China is thus opening up markets for Chinese firms
while other global suppliers of clean-tech solutions fall by the
wayside.
Meanwhile, the US, which has pursued an inward-looking “America
First” policy under President Donald Trump, is bringing together various
institutions under the umbrella of the US International Development
Finance Corporation to strengthen its bilateral development activities.
If the EU wants to level the playing field – and prevent the 2015 Paris
climate agreement and the UN Sustainable Development Goals from sliding
down the global agenda – it needs to reinforce its development financing
activities.Many have long regarded the establishment of an EU
development bank as a necessary and proper step to bolster the bloc’s
global role.
It is now high time for member states to follow through and
set up such an institution under the roof of the EIB, thus leveraging
an asset they have already built together.An EU development bank would
have an immediate, significant, and resource-efficient impact. By
putting the bloc’s national development ministers in the driver’s seat,
while ensuring that finance ministries have overall oversight, the new
institution would bring a coordinated, transparent, and European
approach to development financing that so far has been sorely lacking.
Moreover, a strong governance role for the European Commission and the
European External Action Service would guarantee that the bank’s
strategy and all its individual projects served the EU’s development
policy targets from day one.This new institution would not replace
Europe’s involvement with global and regional multilateral banks, nor
would it weaken the robust and diverse array of national development
institutions. Rather, its role would be to give the EU a stronger voice
on issues where member states share a common ambition that is not
sufficiently considered at the global and regional levels, such as
supporting societal resilience in fragile countries and promoting
climate action.
In order to
capitalize fully on the wealth of existing European development work,
all national development banks and agencies should have the option to
participate in the new EU development bank – without, of course, losing
their autonomy, national mandates, or access to EU funding instruments.
This will make it possible finally to link development financing
activities at the EU and national levels and ensure a transparent
division of tasks.
In addition, activities co-financed by the EU
development bank and national development institutions could become
subject to an accelerated approval procedure for EU risk-sharing
mandates (as is already the case for some EU mandates today). This would
significantly increase impact – without requiring any additional
resources – by reducing the bureaucracy (and time) involved in
allocating these funds.The EU needs to set a new course for development,
and send a strong signal that Europe is ready to play its role in the
world. Our history, principles, and ambition demand nothing less.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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