225 VIPs urge world powers to adopt $2.5 trillion COVID plan By EDITH M. LEDERER 1 Jun 2020 UNITED NATIONS (AP). Click here for more.

225 VIPs urge world powers to adopt $2.5 trillion COVID plan
1 Jun 2020

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — More than 225 current and former global VIPs urged the world’s 20 major economic powers on Monday to hold an urgent meeting to agree to a $2.5 trillion plan to tackle COVID-19 and launch an economic recovery from the pandemic, especially for hard-hit developing and middle-income countries.

They said in a letter that these poor and middle-income countries, which represent nearly 70 percent of the world’s population and approximately one-third of global GDP, demand immediate action. Over 100 countries have approached the International Monetary Fund for help a, they said, and more are expected to do so.

Without action from the G20, the prominent global figures warned that the recession caused by the pandemic will deepen, hurting all economies, “and the world’s most marginalized and poorest peoples the most.”

They said the G20 nations, currently led by Saudi Arabia, represent 85 percent of the world’s nominal GDP and have “the capacity to lead the mobilization of resources on the scale required.”

“We urge leaders to do so immediately,” their letter said.

The signatories include more than 75 former world leaders, three Nobel peace prize winners, four Nobel laureates in economics, former U.N. secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, philanthropist George Soros, former World Bank president James Wolfensohn, former NATO secretary-general Javier Solana and numerous former U.N. officials and past and present economists, humanitarian and health experts.

The summit meeting of the world’s economic powerhouses was started during the 2008 financial crisis, but leaders have held only one video meeting since COVID-19 began circling the globe, and their next meeting isn’t scheduled until November in the Saudi capital Riyadh.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged the G20 leaders before that meeting in late March to adopt a “wartime” plan including a stimulus package “in the trillions of dollars” for people and businesses in the developing world trying to tackle the pandemic.

The G20 leaders did pledge on March 26 to inject over $5 trillion into the global economy to limit job and income loses from COVID-19, and to “do whatever it takes to overcome the pandemic.” But their response has been criticized.

The letter said “May 30th saw the highest daily figure recorded worldwide for new cases of COVID-19,” with countries on every continent trying to stop transmission of the coronavirus. Around 6.19 million infections have been reported worldwide, with over 372,000 people dying, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. The true death toll is believed to be significantly higher, since many died without ever being tested.

The global figures said the G20 leaders need to hold a second meeting to advance implementation of their action plan “and agree to a more strongly coordinated global response to the health, economic and social emergencies we face.”

The G20 comprises the European Union and 19 countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, France, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, United Kingdom and United States.

Pointing to the increase in world poverty, former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark said: “While we welcome the good intentions at the heart of the G20 action plan, concrete measures must urgently be agreed and be implemented in full.”

The signatories pointed to the IMF estimate that emerging markets and developing countries need $2.5 trillion to overcome the crisis.

“But only a fraction of that $2.5 trillion has so far been allocated,” they wrote. “The G20 should agree that the $2.5 trillion level of support will now be provided.”

The global VIPs called for a doubling of the money available to the World Bank for emergency economic aid, and $1 trillion in additional special drawing rights for the IMF.

They also said debt relief for some 76 countries agreed to in April by the G20 — including 40 poor countries in sub-Saharan Africa — “needs to be scaled up radically to include relief by bilateral, multilateral and private creditors until the end of 2021,” and it needs to be done urgently.

Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who chaired the G20 summit in 2009 and helped organize the letter, said: “Without a G20 leaders’ meeting online soon ... a vacuum in global leadership will open up just at the time when we need global action most __ to avoid a second wave of COVID coming out of the poorest countries and to move the world economy from rescue operations to planning a global recovery.”

He said a G20 summit, unlike U.S. President Donald Trump’s expanded Group of Seven summit proposed in September, would include representatives from Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and most of Asia and “could agree a global growth plan and unite a divided world.”

Comments

Popular Posts

By FSJ 16/09/2025. The Housing and the Affordability issue: The architect said lets reason together as we build and design an energetic future with financially energized people; a discussion. By Mary Godwhen. Click here. BW Where would it go if I reverse engineer a "BAPE" shoe logo? Charles cares. He has vowed to have the most able and responsive Tiger economy in Europe and North America and the most safe and ably funded citizens in those regions; his citizens, his people. It is that we will be the economic winners; not losers; at the top and not the bottom...in front and not at the back. It would only take him a day to get it going. We can design anything. Certainly, anything we design demands and requires people with money for us to enjoy it; if it's a restaurant, an amusement park, a shopping centre or a town or city in general. The Bugatti sellers will have more sales and the Vauxhall owners will finally make full payment for the shopping and vacations; for their vehicles also. We do not enjoy suffering, lack or insufficiency. But maybe a vengeful bum might. Money is important. It has to be important. So, why are we incessantly brought to have this conversation about income support rather quite often when observing the economies west of Calais as run by; whom? Laissez Faire is not an economic policy but the policy of no policy in light of industrial mechanization of labor and the social problems it occasions when the families do not have enough money to buy their coal for heat, milk, bananas and vegetables. They would usually just take what they need; wherever they can take it. The economy is run by whom? The income support in Vermont, Minnesota and Massachusetts exceeds $70000.00 per year. This should be so for the whole, entire continent. But, some states and provinces, not all, are being run by income support benefit men touring boxes of undistributed emergency debit cards that they can now hand out to people in those camps. They seek public attention more than public efficacy. They have had enough time to solve the obvious. Money is the obvious issue but you wouldn't be waiting for an God fearing man to come and campaign on this issue when we know you can see the problem and solve it for us. We do not enjoy suffering, lack or insufficiency. But maybe a vengeful bum might. They are experimenting with money in terms of crypto or bit coin and its definition before they would agree to just HAVE MONEY. Money is the most important weapon in spite of all your Oppenheimer detonators that can't read help during peace time and for what when you would still need money?