1 / 7

Future directions in EU development policy

Future directions in EU development policy. Françoise Moreau DG Development and Cooperation – Europe Aid European Commission. The starting point: evolution of EU development policy since 2000. 2000 International community agreed the MDGs

lonato
Télécharger la présentation

Future directions in EU development policy

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. Future directions in EU development policy Françoise Moreau DG Development and Cooperation – Europe Aid European Commission

  2. The starting point: evolution of EU development policy since 2000 2000 International community agreed the MDGs 2005 International commitments on aid effectiveness: Paris Agenda 2005 - EU development policy became: • more European: Consensus, enhanced coordination, Code of Conduct on Division of Labour • broader: emphasis on PCD 2008 Reaffirmation of commitments to MDGs, finance for development and effectiveness: EU recognised as global development leader (EU MDG Agenda for Action, ambitious EU positions for Accra and Doha) Against a backdrop of changing international context throughout the decade: • new actors (private sector, emerging donors, local authorities); • new challenges (climate, multiple crises, vulnerability, security…); • economic downturn & budget constraints (ODA under threat)

  3. 2010-2012: new challenges, new opportunities 2010 New European context: Lisbon Treaty – explicit position of development in external action, clarity of poverty objective as one pillar of external action, strengthened provisions on coordination and coherence (PCD) UN MDG Summit, New York: consensus on need to accelerate progress; EU position for the Summit confirmed commitments to ODA and MDGs; €1 Billion MDG Initiative Many European donors adjusting their portfolios (downsizing, exits, sector focus …) 2011 Events in North Africa: importance of good governance, employment and growth, security-development nexus brought into sharper focus Spring Accountability Report: EU ODA almost €54 billion in 2010 = 0.43% EU GNI; ODA must double to reach 0.7% in 2015; but EU remains the World’s largest donor EEAS and DEVCO up and running MFF proposals (June), EU position for Busan (Q3), policy communications (Q3/4), proposals for post-2013 financial instruments (Q4) Council decisions end 2011-2012

  4. Towards an updated EU development policy Green Paper, November 2010 and public consultation: "EU development policy in support of inclusive growth and sustainable development: Increasing the impact of EU development policy" In parallel with: Green Paper, October 2010 and public consultation: "The future of EU budget support to third countries" Public consultation, January 2011: "What funding for EU external action after 2013?" - preparing the next Multiannual Financial Framework 2014-2020

  5. Basic principles and aims • Build on existing commitments and existing body of EU development policy: update rather than re-write policy; meet current needs and take advantage of new opportunities; keep what works, implement existing commitments, inject the “missing elements” of growth and governance • Propose ways to increase the impact of EU development policy on: • economic and social policy reforms in developing countries; • improved governance and more inclusive and more sustainable economic growth as key ingredients for poverty eradication; • leveraging finance for development; • and, ultimately, poverty reduction (meeting the MDGs and beyond). • Enhance the position of the EU as global development leader and contribute to a broader and more inclusive international development agenda beyond 2015.

  6. Key policy ideas • Strengthening the EU's offer to partner countries in the fields of inclusive and sustainable growth and good governance; • Enhanced concentration of EU and Member States' development cooperation programmes, improved coordination and reduced fragmentation at country level; • Greater differentiation in development partnerships depending on partners' development needs, economic and financial capacities, and performance; • Development beyond aid – strengthening policy coherence for development and linking internal and external policies in pursuit of mutual and global interests; • Broadening partnerships by engaging with emerging donors, civil society, the private sector and local authorities.

  7. Updating development policy to increase impact • Questions? • Feedback? • Ideas? • Concerns?

More Related