1 / 18

EU Strategy for private Sector Development in Developing Countries Antonio García Fragio

EU Strategy for private Sector Development in Developing Countries Antonio García Fragio Head of Economic Development DG DEV EC Tripoli, 26 th November 2010. DG Development and relations with African,Caribbean and Pacific States. Where are we coming from Revising of the EU Strategy

elgin
Télécharger la présentation

EU Strategy for private Sector Development in Developing Countries Antonio García Fragio

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EU Strategy for private Sector Development in Developing Countries Antonio García Fragio Head of Economic Development DG DEV EC Tripoli, 26th November 2010 DG Development and relations with African,Caribbean and Pacific States

  2. Where are we coming from • Revising of the EU Strategy • Study of the Role of Private Sector • The Green Paper on Development Policy • EU Vision on Private Sector

  3. Where are we coming from

  4. IF and other joint instruments with EDFI’s Overall Focus Infrastructure (IF, ITF, WF & EF) Financial Sector (IF) • Projects that foster: • Regional integration • Sustainable development • (environmental projects) “Finance for growth” triggering “finance for all”

  5. Our profile • European Commission: a Political Partner, not just a Donor • Major Grant Donor: Moving into the EU Platform for Cooperation and Development • Long tradition and proven capacity to act at regional level • Lead interlocutor in a wide variety of sector dialogues at country level

  6. Revising of the EU Strategy • Since 2003 (Communication COM (2003) 267 on assistance from the EU to the private sector), the context, the EU strategy and the ACP countries awareness on the importance of business have significantly evolved: • ODA and no-ODA flows • new ODA actors • financial crisis • MDGs • Are all factors that must now be considered

  7. Revision of the EU Strategy: The timetable

  8. The Study on the role of Private Sector in Development -Highlights Partnership with new actors is often a difficult process : a) Differences in Business Culture and Administrative practices b) Relations amongst Partners and roles Importance of flexible and pragmatic collaboration : Definition of the “Private Sector actors” Status, size or origin of the partners Untied nature of the ODA collaboration Acceptance of non-ODA project leadership

  9. The Study on the role of Private Sector in Development - Recommendations Options for engaging with the private sector through: Consortium Model: COM as a political broker Bringing together diverse actors “Piggy backing” on the initiative of the private sector to enhance development results Challenge Fund: Targeted projects Open competitions Focusing on specific expected outcomes

  10. The Green Paper on Development Policy The Green Paper is focused on four key questions: 1. How to ensure a High Impact development policy 2. How to facilitate more inclusive growth 3. How to promote sustainable development as a driver for progress 4. How to achieve durable results in the area of agriculture and food security

  11. The Green Paper on Development Policy A consultative process – encouraging the participation of the public by answering specific questions Three crucial dimensions for an inclusive and sustainable growth: Partnerships for inclusive growth – higher involvement with the private sector – Sustainable investments, access to capital and affordable credit, regulatory framework, innovation, decent work and social protection Fostering regional integration Ensure trade for development

  12. Involving the Private Sector to increase development impact

  13. EU Vision on Private Sector Governance and Enabling Environment: Providing a general framework Policy dialogue Local markets and enterprises & Large-scale PPP’s Blending grants with long- term finance e.g. Interest rate subsidies, equity, guarantees, financial sector support Pro-Poor Dimension: Services, income and jobs Grants, micro-finance funds, pooling, regional development

  14. EU Vision on Private Sector The pro-poor dimension. An opportunity? • Foundation for long term growth by meeting basic needs: food, water, sanitation, health services, etc. • Expanding value chain • Increasing productivity and incomes • Enhancing knowledge and skills • Expanding access to financial products and services

  15. EU Vision on Private Sector Local markets and SME’s & Large-Scale PPP’s How to use our grants to facilitate private investments contributing to development objectives Issues under consideration: The diversity of private investors. The graduation from informal to formal business. Global value chains and clusters Risk mitigation and Instruments? Interest subsidies/equity and quasi equity /guarantees etc. Channels? Financing institutions ,intermediaries, micro finance funds,…

  16. EU Vision on Private Sector Governance and Enabling Business Environment Policy dialogue: using leverage of EU as political player to achieve a level playing field with fair rules • Peace and Security Initiative • Marco economic stability – IMF, COM with general budget support • Sector policy and regulatory frameworks – continental, regional and national: • Ease of doing business, • coping with barriers to investment and • factors of competitiveness (access to goods and services). • Link with the Regional economic integration process - harmonisation of standards, business law, regulatory frameworks, etc.

  17. Thank You! DG Development and relations with African,Caribbean and Pacific States

  18. What has been done so far

More Related