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March
24, 2003
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ANNUAL
MEETING OF IDB BOARD OF GOVERNORS BEGINS IN MILAN
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| IDB
President Iglesias sets forth an agenda for sustained
recovery at the Annual Meeting inaugural session.
(Photo by Wilie Heinz) |
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Milan,
Italy - The IDB Board of Governors inaugurated its 44th
Annual Meeting today in a climate of uncertainty over
the international situation, but in which speakers voiced
optimism over the ability of Latin America and the Caribbean
to resume economic growth and make progress in reducing
poverty.
Attending the inaugural session were IDB governors and
senior governmental officials and many other key policy
makers. The session was held at the Fiera Milano, a
major conference center in this northern Italian city.
The IDB's Annual Meeting is the major event that examines
economic and social development issues in Latin America
and the Caribbean. In addition to the formal sessions,
participants attended seminars on a wide range of development
topics, among them, small- and medium-size businesses,
using new information technologies to strengthen democracy,
best practices for social inclusion of marginalized
groups, globalization and the challenge of equitable
development, and implementing employment policies under
fiscal restraints. Over 3,100 participants registered
for the meeting, including official delegations, representatives
of the private sector, international organizations,
and nongovernmental groups, and journalists.
In his welcoming remarks, Roberto Formigoni, president
of the Lombardi Region, referred to the dramatic times
the world is going through, and urged that countries
come together to work for development and integration.
"We must construct peace through development,"
he said.
He offered his own region as an example of "social
capitalism," in which exports are not just limited
to products, but also to cultural contributions which
contribute to peace and development. Lombardy, along
with certain other regions in Europe, have maintained
their cultural identities while participating fully
in the process of globablization, he said.
In his last speech as chairman of the IDB's Board of
Governors, Brazilian Minister of Planning Guido Mantegadescribed
the problems facing the region, including shrinking
capital flows, continued protectionism in trade, reductions
in foreign direct investment, and return of the threat
of recession.
He highlighted the key role the Bank must play to help
overcome these problems. In particular, he said it was
essential for the Bank to have at its disposition a
wide variety of financial instruments and facilities
"in order to respond appropriately to the many
different countries and situations facing them. Above
all, it needs to stimulate debate aimed at creating
other counter-cyclical instruments." He said that
the approval given to the Bank to make emergency loans
was a major step forward. He also called trade finance
a new facility that "could prove indispensable
at this difficult time for the external sector of Latin
American countries.
Mantega also called for a "new consensus"
in the international approach to development. "Human
life, equality of opportunities, sustainable development
are universal and unconditional values that are normally
included among a people's ultimate objectives,"
he said. But he also called for a consensus in public
policies, based in "willingness to compromise and
find secure paths for a just society." In this
regard, he offered the example of Brazil, which has
created an Economic and Social Development Council that
brings together entrepreneurs, labor unions, civil society,
parliamentarians and other sectors.
The
IDB governors unanimously elected Italian Minister
of Economy and Finance Giulio Tremonti chairman of
the Board of Governors until the next IDB Annual Meeting,
which will be held a year from now in Peru.
In his address, Tremonti said it is necessary to achieve
equilibrium between finance and systems of social
and judicial norms. For example, he said, it is a
mistake to "transplant the futuristic finance
of Wall Street to political systems that are not as
modern."
He also urged measures to overcome the problem of
the informal economies in Latin America. "A person
cannot live in the shadowy area between illegality
and the hope of a social miracle," he said.
Tremonti also called for greater emphasis on ensuring
the effectiveness of development initiatives through
use of a system of indicators that would make it possible
to evaluate results of operations. "The improvement
of effectiveness of development assistance is based
principally on the capacity of the beneficiary countries
for identifying necessary reforms, and then carrying
them out," he said.
In his address before the inaugural session, IDB President
Enrique V. Iglesias said that nations of the region
should focus on developing a long-range vision while
dealing with present-day uncertainties and difficulties.
They must also redouble efforts to achieve sufficiently
high rates of economic growth that will reduce poverty
and ease social tensions.
"The immediate prospect for the world economy
and for our region is one of uncertainties . . . exacerbated
by the complex situation of the Middle East,"
Iglesias said. "Nevertheless, the economies of
several countries in the region have begun to improve
compared to the beginning of 2002."
If international conflicts do not worsen, the economy
of the region could grow between 1.5 and 2 percent
this year, he said. If the upward trend continues,
growth could reach 4 percent in 2004, he added. In
2002 the region's gross national product fell 0.5
percent.
In order to make inroads against the poverty that
has trapped up to 44 percent of the population of
Latin America and the Caribbean, the regional annual
growth rate must reach an average of 2.7 percent annually
over the next 15 years, the IDB president warned.
Iglesias recommended an agenda for sustained recovery
that includes maintaining macroeconomic equilibrium,
focusing social policy to benefit the neediest sectors
of the population, expanding foreign trade, deepening
integration, attracting investment, promoting growth
of the private sector and increasing business productivity,
especially for small- and medium-sized enterprises.
Also addressing the inaugural session were Carlos
A. Magariños, director general of the United
Nations Industrial Development Organization; José
Antonio Ocampo, executive secretary of the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean; Cesar
Gaviria, secretary general of the Organization of
American States, and Pier Ferdinando Casini, president
of the Italian Chamber of Deputies.
Public
utilities
Also
taking place today was a meeting of experts on the
subject of public utilities management in Milan´s
Palazzo Marino. Participants examined lessons that
metropolitan areas in Latin America can learn from
experiences in Italy and other European countries.
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IDB
President

Opening
Ceremony

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