Declaration by Leaders of G20 Summit in Mexico
The following is the declaration issued by the leaders of the G20 Summit in
Los Cabos, Mexico, on June 19.
G20 Leaders Summit
Los Cabos, Mexico
June 19, 2012
G20 Leaders Declaration
1. We, the Leaders of the G20, convened in Los Cabos on 18-19 June
2012.
2. We are united in our resolve to promote growth and jobs.
3. Since we last met, the global recovery has continued to face a number of
challenges. Financial market tensions are high. External, fiscal and financial
imbalances are still prevalent, having a major impact on growth and employment
prospects and confidence. Clearly, the global economy remains vulnerable, with a
negative impact on the everyday lives of people all over the world, affecting
jobs, trade, development, and the environment.
4. We will act together to strengthen recovery and address financial market
tensions.
5. We will work collectively to strengthen demand and restore confidence
with a view to support growth and foster financial stability in order to create
high quality jobs and opportunities for all of our citizens. We have agreed
today on a coordinated Los Cabos Growth and Jobs Action Plan to achieve those
goals.
6. Euro Area members of the G20 will take all necessary policy measures to
safeguard the integrity and stability of the area, improve the functioning of
financial markets and break the feedback loop between sovereigns and banks. We
look forward to the Euro Area working in partnership with the next Greek
government to ensure they remain on the path to reform and sustainability within
the Euro Area.
7. We are implementing our structural and regulatory reform agenda to
enhance medium-term growth prospects and build more resilient financial systems.
We remain committed to reduce imbalances by strengthening deficit countries'
public finances with sound and sustainable policies that take into account
evolving economic conditions and, in countries with large current account
surpluses, by strengthening domestic demand and moving toward greater exchange
rate flexibility.
8. Despite the challenges we all face domestically, we have agreed that
multilateralism is of even greater importance in the current climate, and
remains our best asset to resolve the global economy's difficulties.
9. Recognizing the impact of the continuing crisis on developing countries,
particularly low income countries, we will intensify our efforts to create a
more conducive environment for development, including supporting infrastructure
investment. Our policy actions will improve living conditions across the globe
and protect the most vulnerable. In particular, by stabilizing global markets
and promoting stronger growth, we will generate significant positive effects on
development and poverty reduction across the globe.
Supporting economic stabilization and the global recovery
10. Strong, sustainable and balanced growth remains the top priority of the
G20, as it leads to higher job creation and increases the welfare of people
across the world. We are committed to adopting all necessary policy measures to
strengthen demand, support global growth and restore confidence, address short
and medium-term risks, enhance job creation and reduce unemployment, as
reflected in the Los Cabos Growth and Jobs Action Plan (see Annex). We will
implement all our commitments in a timely manner and rigorously monitor their
implementation.
11. Against the background of renewed market tensions, Euro Area members of
the G20 will take all necessary measures to safeguard the integrity and
stability of the area, improve the functioning of financial markets and break
the feedback loop between sovereigns and banks. We welcome the significant
actions taken since the last summit by the Euro Area to support growth, ensure
financial stability and promote fiscal responsibility as a contribution to the
G20 framework for strong, sustainable and balanced growth. In this context, we
welcome Spain's plan to recapitalize its banking system and the Eurogroup's
announcement of support for Spain's financial restructuring authority. The
adoption of the Fiscal Compact and its ongoing implementation, together with
growth-enhancing policies and structural reform and financial stability
measures, are important steps towards greater fiscal and economic integration
that lead to sustainable borrowing costs. The imminent establishment of the
European Stability Mechanism is a substantial strengthening of the European
firewalls. We fully support the actions of the Euro Area in moving forward with
the completion of the Economic and Monetary Union. Towards that end, we support
the intention to consider concrete steps towards a more integrated financial
architecture, encompassing banking supervision, resolution and recapitalization,
and deposit insurance. Euro Area members will foster intra Euro Area adjustment
through structural reforms to strengthen competitiveness in deficit countries
and to promote demand and growth in surplus countries. The European Union
members of the G20 are determined to move forward expeditiously on measures to
support growth including through completing the European Single Market and
making better use of European financial means, such as the European Investment
Bank (EIB), pilot project bonds, and structural and cohesion funds, for more
targeted investment, employment, growth and competitiveness, while
maintaining the firm commitment to implement fiscal consolidation to be
assessed on a structural basis. We look forward to the Euro Area working in
partnership with the next Greek government to ensure they remain on the path to
reform and sustainability within the Euro Area.
12. All G20 members will take the necessary actions to strengthen global
growth and restore confidence. Advanced economies will ensure that the pace of
fiscal consolidation is appropriate to support the recovery, taking
country-specific circumstances into account and, in line with the Toronto
commitments, address concerns about medium term fiscal sustainability. Those
advanced and emerging economies which have fiscal space will let the automatic
fiscal stabilizers to operate taking into account national circumstances and
current demand conditions. Should economic conditions deteriorate significantly
further, those countries with sufficient fiscal space stand ready to coordinate
and implement discretionary fiscal actions to support domestic demand, as
appropriate. In many countries, higher investment in education, innovation and
infrastructure can support the creation of jobs now while raising productivity
and future growth prospects. Recognizing the need to pursue growth-oriented
policies that support demand and recovery, the United States will calibrate the
pace of its fiscal consolidation by ensuring that its public finances are placed
on a sustainable long-run path so that a sharp fiscal contraction in 2013 is
avoided.
13. Monetary policy will maintain price stability over the medium term
while continuing to support the economic recovery. We will strengthen confidence
in our banks, maintaining momentum on the financial sector reforms needed to
safeguard our financial systems over the medium term while taking appropriate
actions to protect credit channels and the integrity of the global payment and
settlement systems. Healthy banks, with an ability to lend, are critical to the
global recovery.
14. G20 members will remain vigilant of the evolution of oil prices and
will stand ready to carry out additional actions as needed, including the
commitment by producing countries to continue to ensure an appropriate level of
supply consistent with demand. We welcome Saudi Arabia's readiness to mobilize,
as necessary, existing spare capacity to ensure adequate supply. We will also
remain vigilant of other commodity prices.
15. A number of emerging markets are now also experiencing a slowdown in
growth. In response, these countries are appropriately directing monetary and
fiscal policies to support growth while ensuring stability and, in some cases,
introducing new measures to boost their economies, in particular through
strengthening domestic demand in a context of weaker external demand.
16. We welcome progress by countries with large current account surpluses
to increase domestic demand and actions by countries with large current account
deficits to increase national savings. Emerging surplus economies will carry out
further actions to increase domestic consumption, including by removing price
and tax distortions and strengthening social safety nets, while advanced surplus
economies or those with relatively weak private demand will promote domestic
demand, notably through the liberalization of service sectors and the promotion
of investment, including through the removal of inefficiencies. Higher national
savings in countries with current account deficits will contribute to a lasting
reduction in global imbalances. We recognize the special circumstances of large
commodity exporters with regard to current account surpluses. We reaffirm our
commitment to move more rapidly toward market-determined exchange rate systems
and exchange rate flexibility to reflect underlying fundamentals, avoid
persistent exchange rate misalignments, and refrain from competitive devaluation
of currencies. We also welcome the commitment by China to allow market forces to
play a larger role in determining movements in the Remnimbi (RMB), continue to
reform its exchange rate regime, and to increase the transparency of its
exchange rate policy.
17. All G20 members have put forward structural reform commitments to
strengthen and sustain global demand, foster job creation, contribute to global
rebalancing and increase growth potential. These include product market reforms
to increase competition, measures to stabilize the housing sector, labor market
reforms to boost competitiveness and employment, as well as steps to strengthen
social safety nets in a way that is fiscally responsible, advance tax reform to
raise productivity, increase investment in infrastructure, and promote inclusive
green growth and sustainable development as appropriate to country
circumstances. We ask Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors to consider
ways in which the G20 can foster investment in infrastructure and ensure the
availability of sufficient funding for infrastructure projects, including
Multilateral Development Banks' (MDBs) financing and technical support.
18. In all policy areas, we commit to minimize the negative spillovers on
other countries of policies implemented for domestic purposes. We reaffirm our
shared interest in a strong and stable international financial system. While
capital flows can be beneficial to recipient economies, we reiterate that excess
volatility of financial flows and disorderly movements in exchange rates have
adverse implications for economic and financial stability.
19. Recognizing the importance of transparency and accountability in
reinforcing credibility and confidence, we have agreed on the Los Cabos
Accountability Assessment Framework that accompanies the Growth and Jobs Action
Plan. This Framework establishes the procedures we will follow to report on
progress in implementing our policy commitments. We welcome the first
Accountability Report under this new framework. We task our Finance Ministers
and Central Bank Governors to present the second Accountability Report for the
Leaders' Summit in St. Petersburg in 2013.
Employment and Social Protection
20. Quality employment is at the heart of our macroeconomic policies. Jobs
with labor rights, social security coverage and decent income contribute to more
stable growth, enhance social inclusion and reduce poverty. We therefore endorse
the recommendations of our Labor and Employment Ministers to urgently combat
unemployment through appropriate labor market measures and fostering the
creation of decent work and quality jobs, particularly for youth and other
vulnerable groups, who have been severely hit by the economic crisis. We
reaffirm our commitment to youth to facilitate their access to quality jobs,
which will boost their life prospects. We welcome the work of the G20 Task Force
on Employment and extend its mandate for an additional year in the terms
proposed by our Ministers. Consistent with the Los Cabos Growth and Jobs Action
Plan, we consider that structural reforms, in full respect of the fundamental
principles and rights at work, can play an important role in lifting economic
growth to generate labor market opportunities, mobility and jobs. We also commit
to intensify our efforts to strengthen cooperation in education, skills
development and training policies, including internship and on-the-job training,
which support a successful school-to-work transition.
21. Creating jobs and reducing unemployment, particularly among our youth
and those most affected by the crisis, is central to all our countries. We
welcome the report by the International Labour Organization (ILO), Organisation
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and World Bank on boosting jobs and living standards in G20 countries. We
will continue to focus on measures to accelerate the pace of the recovery in
jobs and the reduction in unemployment.
22. We recognize the importance of establishing nationally determined
social protection floors. We will continue to foster inter-agency and
international policy coherence, coordination, cooperation and knowledge sharing
to assist low-income countries in capacity building for implementing nationally
determined social protection floors. We ask international organizations to
identify policy options with low-income countries on how to develop effective
sustainable protection floors.
23. We commit to take concrete actions to overcome the barriers hindering
women's full economic and social participation and to expand economic
opportunities for women in G20 economies. We also express our firm commitment to
advance gender equality in all areas, including skills training, wages and
salaries, treatment in the workplace, and responsibilities in care-giving.
24. We ask our Labor Ministers to review progress made on this agenda and
we welcome consultations with social partners. In this regard, we appreciate the
contribution of the Business-20 (B20) and Labor-20 (L20) to the process of the
G20 under the Mexican Presidency.
25. We recognize the role of travel and tourism as a vehicle for job
creation, economic growth and development, and, while recognizing the sovereign
right of States to control the entry of foreign nationals, we will work towards
developing travel facilitation initiatives in support of job creation, quality
work, poverty reduction and global growth.
Trade
26. We are firmly committed to open trade and investment, expanding markets
and resisting protectionism in all its forms, which are necessary conditions for
sustained global economic recovery, jobs and development. We underline the
importance of an open, predictable, rules-based, transparent multilateral
trading system and are committed to ensure the centrality of the World Trade
Organization (WTO).
27. Recognizing the importance of investment for boosting economic growth,
we commit to maintaining a supportive business environment for investors.
28. We are deeply concerned about rising instances of protectionism around
the world. Following up our commitment made in Cannes, we reaffirm our
standstill commitment until the end of 2014 with regard to measures affecting
trade and investment, and our pledge to roll back any new protectionist measure
that may have arisen, including new export restrictions and WTO-inconsistent
measures to stimulate exports. We also undertake to notify in a timely manner
trade and investment restrictive measures. We uphold the inventory and
monitoring work of the WTO, OECD and United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) on trade and investment measures and encourage them to
reinforce and deepen the work in these areas, consistent with their respective
mandates.
29. We value the discussion held by our Trade Ministers in Puerto Vallarta
on the relevance of regional and global value chains to world trade, recognizing
their role in fostering economic growth, employment and development and
emphasizing the need to enhance the participation of developing countries in
such value chains. We encourage a deepening of these discussions in the WTO,
UNCTAD and OECD within their respective mandates, and we call on them to
accelerate their work on analyzing the functioning of global value chains and
their relationship with trade and investment flows, development and jobs, as
well as on how to measure trade flows, to better understand how our actions
affect our countries and others, and to report on progress under Russia's
Presidency.
30. In line with the Cannes Communiqué, we stand by the Doha Development
Agenda mandate and reaffirm our commitment to pursue fresh, credible approaches
to furthering trade negotiations across the board. We will continue to work
towards concluding the Doha Round negotiations, including outcomes in specific
areas where progress is possible, such as trade facilitation, and other issues
of concern for least developed countries. We urge progress in streamlining WTO
accession procedures for the world's poorest countries.
31. We support strengthening the WTO through improving the way it conducts
its regular business, and its dispute settlement system. We also direct our
representatives to further discussions on challenges and opportunities for the
multilateral trading system in a globalized economy.
Strengthening the international financial architecture
32. We recognize the importance of effective global and regional safety
nets. We welcome the firm commitments to increase the resources available to the
IMF. This is the result of a broad international cooperative effort that
includes a significant number of countries. The commitments exceed $450 billion
and are in addition to the quota increase under the 2010 Reform. These resources
will be available for the whole membership of the IMF, and not earmarked for any
particular region. These resources, which qualify as reserve assets, would be
channeled through bilateral loans and investments such as note purchase
agreements to the IMF's General Resources Account under the modalities which
have been approved by the IMF Executive Board. This effort shows the G20 and the
international community's commitment to take the steps needed to safeguard
global financial stability and enhance the IMF's role in crisis prevention and
resolution.
33. We reaffirm our commitment to implement in full the 2010 Quota and
Governance Reform by the agreed date of the 2012 IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings.
These reforms are crucial to enhancing the IMF's legitimacy, relevance and
effectiveness, and will support efforts to further strengthen Fund surveillance
and to ensure that the IMF is adequately resourced to play its systemic role. As
part of these reforms, we are committed to completing the comprehensive review
of the quota formula, to address deficiencies and weaknesses in the current
quota formula, by January 2013 and to complete the next general review of quotas
by January 2014. We agree that the formula should be simple and transparent,
consistent with the multiple roles of quotas, result in calculated shares that
are broadly acceptable to the membership, and be feasible to implement based on
timely, high quality and widely available data. We reaffirm that the
distribution of quotas based on the formula should better reflect the relative
weights of IMF members in the world economy, which have changed substantially in
view of strong GDP growth in dynamic emerging markets and developing countries.
We reaffirm the importance of continuing to protect the voice and representation
of the poorest members of the IMF. We ask our Finance Ministers and Central Bank
Governors to review progress on this issue when they meet in November.
34. We agreed that the current surveillance framework should be
significantly enhanced, including through a better integration of bilateral and
multilateral surveillance with a focus on global, domestic and financial
stability, including spillovers from countries' policies. We welcome the work of
the IMF to advance considerations for a proposed integrated surveillance
decision and commit to support the decision process. We underscore the
importance of rigorous surveillance on exchange rate policies and support a more
ample coverage of surveillance activities, where relevant, including global
liquidity, capital flows, capital account measures, reserve and fiscal, monetary
and financial sector policies that could have an impact on external stability.
We welcome the IMF's ongoing work to produce an external sector report, which
would strengthen multilateral analysis and enhance the transparency of
surveillance. We also recognize that political ownership and traction is
critical to effective surveillance, and that the International Monetary and
Financial Committee (IMFC) has a role in facilitating the active involvement of
all IMF members. We look forward to substantial progress by the next IMF/World
Bank Annual Meetings.
35. We welcome the interim progress report and look forward to the joint
annual progress report to support the development of local currency bond markets
to be prepared by the World Bank, Regional Development Banks, IMF, OECD and the
Bank of International Settlements (BIS). The full report will be presented at
the November meeting of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors. This
issue is of great importance to emerging markets and developing countries,
recognizing that the liquidity, efficiency and operation of these markets are
being challenged by the current global financial situation.
Reforming the financial sector and fostering financial inclusion
36. We welcome the progress report by the Financial Stability Board (FSB)
on taking forward the G20 commitments for strengthening financial stability and
the FSB's enhanced monitoring of implementation at the national level. We are
committed to the timely, full and consistent implementation of agreed policies
in order to support a stable and integrated global financial system and to
prevent future crises.
37. We welcome the publication of the traffic lights scoreboard to track
progress in the implementation of all our financial reform recommendations and
pledge to take all necessary actions to make progress in the areas where
difficulties in policy development or implementation have been identified.
38. In particular, we recognize the substantial progress to date in the
priority reform areas identified by the FSB's Coordination Framework for
Implementation Monitoring (CFIM): the Basel capital and liquidity framework; the
framework for global systemically important financial institutions (G-SIFIs),
resolution regimes, over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives reforms, shadow banking,
and compensation practices. We commit to complete work in these important areas
to achieve full implementation of reforms.
39. We reaffirm our commitment that all standardized OTC derivative
contracts should be traded on exchanges or electronic trading platforms, where
appropriate, and cleared through central counterparties by end-2012, OTC
derivative contracts should be reported to trade repositories and non-centrally
cleared contracts should be subject to higher capital requirements. We welcome
the FSB progress report on implementation. Now that substantial progress has
been achieved in the four safeguards for a resilient and efficient global
framework for central clearing, jurisdictions should rapidly finalize their
decision-making and put in place the needed legislation and regulations to meet
the G20 commitment for central clearing. We acknowledge the progress made to
develop the key principles to promote internationally consistent minimum
standards for the margining of non-centrally cleared derivatives and encourage
international standard setters to finalize the proposed global margin standards
by the end of this year, to match the implementation deadline for other OTC
derivatives reforms and for the Basel capital framework.
40. We welcome progress in implementing Basel II, 2.5 and III and urge
jurisdictions to fully implement the standards according to the agreed
timelines. We welcome the Basel Committee's consultative proposals for a
fundamental review of the market risk framework. We welcome the FSB's progress
report on the implementation of the principles and standards for sound
compensation practices, reaffirm our commitment to ensure that these are
followed and ask the FSB to continue its ongoing monitoring.
41. We reiterate our commitment to make our national resolution regimes
consistent with the FSB Key Attributes of Effective Resolution Regimes so that
no bank or other financial institution is "too big to fail". To this end, we
also support the ongoing elaboration of recovery and resolution plans and
institution-specific cross-border cooperation agreements for all G-SIFIs. We
reiterate our commitment to strengthen the intensity and effectiveness of the
supervision of SIFIs and ask the FSB to report on further progress in this area
to the November 2012 G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors'
meeting.
42. We welcome progress on developing a set of principles as a common
framework for the identification of, and policy measures relating to, domestic
systemically important banks (D-SIBs) and ask our Finance Ministers and Central
Bank Governors to review recommendations in these areas at their meeting in
November. We support continuing work for the strengthening of the oversight and
regulation of the shadow banking system, and look forward to our Finance
Ministers and Central Bank Governors reviewing recommendations in these areas at
their meeting in November. We ask the FSB in consultation with the International
Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) to complete their work on
identification and policy measures for global systemically important insurers by
April 2013. Towards reducing systemic risk, we look forward to the preparation
by the FSB in consultation with International Organization of Securities
Commissions (IOSCO) of methodologies to identify other systemically important
non-bank financial entities by end-2012 and call on Committee on Payment and
Settlement Systems (CPSS) and IOSCO to continue their work on systemically
important market infrastructures. We also ask the IAIS to continue its work to
develop a common framework for the supervision of internationally active
insurance groups by end-2013.
43. We call for accelerated progress by national authorities and standard
setting bodies in ending the mechanistic reliance on credit ratings and
encourage steps that would enhance transparency of and competition among credit
rating agencies. We support continuing work to achieve convergence to a single
set of high-quality accounting standards. We welcome IOSCO's report on the
functioning of the credit default swap markets and ask IOSCO to report on next
steps by the November 2012 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors'
meeting.
44. We endorse the FSB recommendations regarding the framework for
development of a global legal entity identifier (LEI) system for parties to
financial transactions, with a global governance framework representing the
public interest. The LEI system will be launched by March 2013 and we ask the
FSB to report on implementation progress by the November 2012 Finance Ministers
and Central Bank Governors' meeting. We encourage global adoption of the LEI to
support authorities and market participants in identifying and managing
financial risks.
45. We welcome the FSB study, prepared in coordination with the IMF and the
World Bank, to identify potential unintended consequences of the agreed
financial regulatory reforms for Emerging Markets and Developing Economies
(EMDEs). We encourage continued monitoring analysis and reporting by the FSB and
dialogue among the FSB, standard-setters, international financial institutions
and national authorities of EMDEs, to address material unintended consequences
as appropriate without prejudice to our commitment to implement the agreed
reforms.
46. We endorse the recommendations and the revised FSB Charter for placing
the FSB on an enduring organizational footing, with legal personality,
strengthened governance, greater financial autonomy and enhanced capacity to
coordinate the development and implementation of financial regulatory policies,
while maintaining strong links with the BIS. We call for a full implementation
of the recommendations by our next meeting and substantial progress by the
November 2012 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors' meeting. We call on
the FSB to continue to keep under review the structure of its
representation.
47. We welcome the ongoing work by the FSB on adherence to supervisory and
regulatory information exchange and cooperation standards and look forward to a
further public statement on progress under the initiative ahead of the Finance
Ministers and Central Bank Governors' meeting in November 2012.
48. In the tax area, we reiterate our commitment to strengthen transparency
and comprehensive exchange of information. We commend the progress made as
reported by the Global Forum and urge all countries to fully comply with the
standard and implement the recommendations identified in the course of the
reviews, in particular the 13 jurisdictions whose framework does not allow them
to qualify to phase 2 at this stage. We expect the Global Forum to quickly start
examining the effectiveness of information exchange practices and to report to
us and our finance ministers. We welcome the OECD report on the practice of
automatic information exchange, where we will continue to lead by example in
implementing this practice. We call on countries to join this growing practice
as appropriate and strongly encourage all jurisdictions to sign the Multilateral
Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance. We also welcome the efforts to
enhance interagency cooperation to tackle illicit flows including the outcomes
of the Rome meeting of the Oslo Dialogue. We reiterate the need to prevent base
erosion and profit shifting and we will follow with attention the ongoing work
of the OECD in this area.
49. We support the renewal of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF)
mandate, thereby sustaining global efforts to combat money laundering and the
financing of terrorism and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. G20
members also welcome the adoption of the revised FATF standards and look forward
to their implementation. We welcome the progress made by FATF in identifying and
monitoring high-risk jurisdictions with strategic Anti-Money
Laundering/Counter-Terrorist Financing (AML/CFT) deficiencies, using AML/CFT
tools in the fight against corruption, improving transparency of corporate
vehicles and increasing cooperation against tax crimes, addressing the risks
posed by tax havens, as well as in increasing the reach and the effectiveness of
AML/CFT measures by also considering financial inclusion efforts. We look
forward to the completion in 2013 of the update of the FATF assessment process
for the next round of mutual evaluations.
50. We welcome the progress made by the Global Partnership for Financial
Inclusion (GPFI) on implementing the five recommendations set out in its 2011
report and call on the GPFI to continue working towards their full
implementation. We endorse the G20 Basic Set of financial inclusion indicators
developed by the GPFI. Recognizing the key role that SMEs play in economic
development, and poverty reduction, we welcome the launch of the SME Finance
Compact that will support developing innovative models and approaches to address
the specific access to finance challenges and constraints faced by developing
countries with regards to SME finance. We welcome the forthcoming GPFI
conference on standard setting bodies and financial inclusion as a means of
helping to create an enabling regulatory environment, and we call on the GPFI to
report progress to our Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in November.
Finally, we support the ongoing effort to create a fourth GPFI subgroup that
will focus on consumer protection and financial literacy issues.
51. We acknowledge the efforts of those G20 and non-G20 countries committed
to national coordination platforms and strategies for financial inclusion under
the "G20 Financial Inclusion Peer Learning Program" and encourage similar
efforts to advance effective implementation of the G20 Principles for Innovative
Financial Inclusion such as the commitments to concrete actions to promote
financial inclusion made by developing and emerging countries under the Maya
Declaration, recognizing the ongoing efforts and the support by the World Bank
Group and the Alliance for Financial Inclusion, and other stakeholders including
the United Nations (UN), and bilateral donors to foster financial
inclusion.
52. On financial education, we endorse the OECD/International Network on
Financial Education (INFE) High Level Principles on National Strategies for
Financial Education, and call on the OECD/INFE and the World Bank in cooperation
with the GPFI to deliver further tools to promote financial education, with a
progress report to the next Summit. For advancing the financial consumer
protection agenda, we take note of the discussion on the Statutes of the
International Financial Consumer Protection Network (FinCoNet) and on the issues
of formal structure and financial support to ensure the exchange of best
practices. We also endorse the Action Plan presented by the G20/OECD Task Force
on Financial Consumer Protection to develop effective approaches to support the
implementation of the High Level Principles on Financial Consumer Protection,
and look forward to an update report by the Leaders' Summit in St. Petersburg in
2013.
53. We recognize the need for women and youth to gain access to financial
services and financial education, ask the GPFI, the OECD/INFE, and the World
Bank to identify barriers they may face and call for a progress report to be
delivered by the next Summit.
54. We welcome the launch of the Mexico Financial Inclusion Challenge:
Innovative Solutions for Unlocking Access, a call for innovations that address
barriers to financial inclusion through the creation of valuable, affordable,
secure, and comprehensive financial services.
Enhancing food security and addressing commodity price volatility
55. The Action Plan on Food Price Volatility and Agriculture adopted by the
Ministers of Agriculture in 2011 underlined that to feed a world population
expected to exceed 9.3 billion by 2050, agricultural production will have to
increase between 50 and 70 percent, and by almost 100 percent in developing
countries. We recognize that increasing production and productivity on a
sustainable basis while considering the diversity of agricultural conditions is
one of the most important challenges that the world faces today. The crisis in
the Sahel and the Horn of Africa also underscores that strengthening emergency
and long-term responses to food insecurity remains a pressing challenge. We also
note that chronic malnutrition is an enormous drain on a country's human
resources, and we therefore support the Scaling Up Nutrition movement and
encourage wider involvement of G20 members.
56. We welcome the considerable progress made in implementing the Action
Plan and the food security pillar of the Seoul Multi-Year Action Plan on
Development. We support the G20 Agriculture Vice-Ministers' Report annexed to
this Declaration, on the progress made on previous commitments and key
recommendations on sustainably increasing agricultural productivity, containing
inputs from several international organizations coordinated by the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the OECD, in addition to other
recommendations from B20 and civil society.
57. To fight hunger, we commit to continue our efforts on our initiatives,
including the Tropical Agriculture Platform, the Platform for Agricultural Risk
Management, the GEO Global Agriculture Monitoring, research initiatives for
wheat, rice and corn, the Rapid Response Forum, regional emergency food
reserves, the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program and support for the
Principles of Responsible Agriculture Investment. Recognizing the important
contribution of greater transparency to reducing food price volatility, we
welcome the progress made in the implementation of the Agricultural Market
Information System (AMIS). We recognize that a more stable, predictable,
distortion-free, open and transparent trading system, including as regards
agriculture, has a critical role to play to promote food security.
58. We reaffirm our commitment to remove export restrictions and
extraordinary taxes on food purchased for non-commercial humanitarian purposes
by the World Food Programme (WFP). We encourage the implementation of the
Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries
and Forests in the Context of National Food Security.
59. We strongly welcome the launch of the "AgResults" Initiative, aimed at
improving food security for the poor and vulnerable by encouraging private
sector innovation of new agricultural products and systems constrained by market
failures in agriculture. We look forward to the launch of the pilot projects
focused on innovations in nutrient-fortified crops, post-harvest waste-reducing
storage solutions and crop quality technologies in Sub-Saharan Africa. We
commend those who have already committed or signaled their intention to commit
funding to this initiative and encourage broader participation.
60. We recognize the need to adapt agriculture to climate change and we
recognize the importance of improving the efficiency of water and soil use in a
sustainable manner. To this end, we support the development of and a greater use
of available technologies, well-known practices and techniques such as soil
fertility enhancement, minimum tillage and agroforestry, and call upon
international organizations to provide a report on science-based options to
improve the efficiency of water use in agriculture including in ways
particularly suitable for small farms.
61. We recognize the importance to the global economic recovery of
maintaining stability in international commodity markets. We stress the
importance of well-functioning and transparent physical and financial
commodities' markets and reduced excessive price volatility to achieve food
security and strong growth that is both sustainable and inclusive. We recognize
that excessive commodity price volatility has significant implications for all
countries, increasing uncertainty for actors in the economy and potentially
hampering stability of the budgets, and predictability of economic planning. We
recognize that mitigating the negative effects of commodity price volatility on
the most vulnerable is an important component of reducing poverty and boosting
economic growth. We therefore endorse the conclusions of the G20 report on the
macroeconomic impacts of excessive commodity price volatility on growth and its
identification of policy options that countries could consider, taking account
of national circumstances to mitigate any such effect. We also acknowledge and
appreciate the participation and valuable inputs of the IMF, World Bank and
UNCTAD. We ask our Finance Ministers to report in 2013 on progress on the G20's
contribution to facilitate better functioning of these physical markets, taking
note of possible areas of further work outlined in the report. We reaffirm our
commitment to enhance transparency and avoid abuse in financial commodity
markets, including OTC, with effective intervention powers for market regulators
and authorities and an appropriate regulation and supervisory framework. In this
regard we look forward to IOSCO's report on the implementation of its
recommendations on commodity derivatives markets by November 2012.
62. We recognize that excessive price volatility in energy commodities is
also an important source of economic instability. We remain committed to
well-functioning and transparent energy markets. We will continue to work to
improve the timeliness, completeness and reliability of JODI-Oil and look
forward to a progress report next year. We will work on the JODI-Gas database on
the same principles. We expect the International Energy Forum (IEF) report on
improving the reliability of the JODI-Oil database and the report on
transparency in international gas and coal markets submitted by the
International Energy Agency (IEA), IEF, and Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) to be discussed by our Finance Ministers in November.
We also look forward to IOSCO's recommendations to improve the functioning and
oversight of Price Reporting Agencies in November 2012, which will be produced
in collaboration with other mandated organizations (IEF, IEA and OPEC), and task
Finance Ministers to take concrete measures in this area as necessary.
Meeting the Challenges of Development
63. Eradicating poverty and achieving strong, inclusive, sustainable and
balanced growth remain core objectives of the G20 development agenda. We
reaffirm our commitment to work with developing countries, particularly low
income countries, and to support them in implementing the nationally driven
policies and priorities which are needed to fulfill internationally agreed
development goals, particularly the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and
beyond.
64. We welcome the initiative of the Development Working Group to build
upon the work of previous G20 presidencies, and its focus on three priorities
during the Mexican Presidency - food security, infrastructure and inclusive
green growth. We commend the progress achieved against our commitments in the
Seoul Multi-Year Action Plan, and support the 2012 Development Working Group
progress report annexed to this Declaration. We invite the Development Working
Group to explore putting in place a process for ensuring assessment and
accountability for G20 development actions by the next Summit.
65. Investment in infrastructure is critical for sustained economic growth,
poverty reduction, and job creation. We therefore welcome the strong progress
made under the Multi-Year Action Plan, including in implementing the
recommendations of the Multilateral Development Banks' (MDBs) Action Plan and
the High Level Panel on Infrastructure.
66. While recognizing that public financing of infrastructure development
projects in developing countries remains essential, we consider it should be
complemented by private sector investment. We encourage MDBs to continue
progress under the Action Plan, and welcome the report on addressing
Misperception of Risk and Return in Low Income Countries. This contains
important messages about properly perceiving the risks posed, as well as the
opportunities offered, by long-term infrastructure investment in low income
countries. Recognizing the challenge that rapid urbanization poses and the need
to make cities more sustainable, we welcome the report on Best Practices for
Urban Mass Transport Infrastructure Projects in Medium and Large Cities in
Developing Countries, and support the follow-up actions as set out in the
Development Working Group report.
67. We reaffirm our commitments to the global partnership for development,
as set out in the MDGs, and welcome efforts to contribute to this end, including
the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation to be launched with
voluntary participation under the auspices of the broad consensus achieved at
the 4th High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness held in Busan, Korea.
68. We recognize the value of Disaster Risk Management (DRM) tools and
strategies to better prevent disasters, protect populations and assets, and
financially manage their economic impacts. We appreciate World Bank and OECD
combined efforts, with the UN's support, to provide inputs and broaden
participation in the discussion on DRM. We welcome the World Bank's and Mexico's
joint publication on country experiences in this area with the support of G20
members, and look forward to the OECD voluntary framework to facilitate
implementation of DRM strategies, to be completed by November.
Promoting longer-term prosperity through inclusive green growth
69. The long-term development and prosperity of current and future
generations requires us to look beyond the immediate economic crisis. We
acknowledge the importance of finding ways in which economic growth,
environmental protection and social inclusion can complement and reinforce each
other. Inclusive green growth in the context of sustainable development and
poverty eradication can help achieve our development and economic goals, while
protecting our environment, and improving social well-being on which our future
depends. Inclusive green growth should not be used to introduce protectionist
measures.
70. We commit to continue to help developing countries sustain and
strengthen their development through appropriate measures, including those that
encourage inclusive green growth. We will reaffirm our commitment to sustainable
development at the 2012 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development
(Rio+20). We commit to maintaining a focus on inclusive green growth as part of
our G20 agenda and in the light of agreements reached at Rio+20 and the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
71. Climate change will continue to have a significant impact on the world
economy, and costs will be higher to the extent we delay additional action. We
reiterate our commitment to fight climate change and welcome the outcome of the
17th Conference of the Parties to the UN climate change conferences. We are
committed to the full implementation of the outcomes of Cancun and Durban and
will work with Qatar as the incoming Presidency towards achieving a successful
and balanced outcome at COP-18. We emphasize the need to structurally transform
economies towards a climate-friendly path over the medium term. We welcome the
creation of the G20 study group on climate finance, in order to consider ways to
effectively mobilize resources taking into account the objectives, provisions
and principles of the UNFCCC in line with the Cancun Agreement and ask to
provide a progress report to Finance Ministers in November. We support the
operationalization of the Green Climate Fund.
72. The Development Working Group discussed a broad set of practical,
voluntary measures and actions that have the potential to help countries define
their paths towards sustainable development based on their own circumstances and
priorities. We believe that developing countries should have access to
institutions and mechanisms that can facilitate knowledge sharing, resource
mobilization and building technical and institutional capacity to design and
implement inclusive green growth strategies and policies. We welcome
international efforts in launching the Green Growth Knowledge Platform and will
continue exploring options to provide appropriate support to interested
developing countries. We welcome the delivery of a non-prescriptive, voluntary
toolkit of policy options for inclusive green growth and encourage efforts to
promote its implementation. We encourage further exploration of effective
mechanisms to mobilize public and private funds for inclusive green growth
investment in developing countries, including through the public-private
Dialogue Platform on Inclusive Green Investments. We welcome the B20's Green
Growth Action Alliance.
73. We highlight that green growth and sustainable development have strong
potential to stimulate long term prosperity and well being. We welcome the
report prepared by the OECD, the World Bank and the UN on incorporating green
growth and sustainable development policies into structural reform agendas,
tailored to specific country conditions and level of development. We also
acknowledge the G20 efforts to voluntarily self-report on current actions taken
to integrate green growth and sustainable development into structural reform
agendas. We will self-report again in 2013, on a voluntary basis, and ask
appropriate officials to report back on countries' efforts and progress on
incorporating green growth policies in structural reform agendas and in relevant
national plans to promote sustainable development.
74. We welcome the progress report on fossil fuel subsidies, and we
reaffirm our commitment to rationalize and phase out inefficient fossil fuel
subsides that encourage wasteful consumption over the medium term while
providing targeted support for the poorest. We ask Finance Ministers to report
back by the next Summit on progress made, and acknowledging the relevance of
accountability and transparency, to explore options for a voluntary peer review
process for G20 members by their next meeting. We also welcome a dialogue on
fossil fuel subsidies with other groups already engaged in this work.
75. In Cannes we committed to promote low-carbon development strategies in
order to optimize the potential for green growth and ensure sustainable
development in our countries and beyond. We therefore welcome the report on
clean energy and energy efficiency technologies and acknowledge the G20
countries' efforts to foster investment in these technologies through the
sharing of national experiences regarding challenges for technology
deployment.
76. We welcome the establishment of a Global Marine Environment Protection
Best Practices Sharing Mechanism website, and look forward to its launch in
accordance with the Cannes mandate.
Intensifying the fight against corruption
77. Corruption impedes economic growth, threatens the integrity of markets,
undermines fair competition, distorts resource allocation, destroys public trust
and undermines the rule of law. We call on all relevant stakeholders to play an
active role in fighting corruption.
78. Closing the implementation and enforcement gap remains an important
priority, and we continue to make significant progress towards the full
implementation of the Seoul G20 Anti-Corruption Action Plan, and the commitments
made in the Cannes Monitoring Report. We reiterate our commitment to the
ratification and full implementation of the United Nations Convention against
Corruption (UNCAC), and to more active engagement with the OECD working group on
bribery on a voluntary basis. We welcome continuing engagement from the B20 in
the fight against corruption and, in accordance with the Terms of Reference of
the review mechanism, will involve the private sector and civil society in the
UNCAC review process on a voluntary basis. We endorse today the G20
Anti-Corruption Working Group principles for denial of entry to our countries of
corrupt officials, and those who corrupt them, and will continue to develop
frameworks for cooperation. We also endorse the Working Group's principles for
financial and asset disclosure systems for relevant officials to prevent,
identify and appropriately manage conflicts of interest.
79. We commit to enforcing anti-corruption legislation, and we will pursue
those who receive and solicit bribes as well as those who pay them in line with
our countries' legislation. To help facilitate international cooperation among
G20 and non-G20 governments in their investigation and prosecution of
corruption, we will publish a guide on Mutual Legal Assistance from G20
countries, as well as information on tracing assets in G20 jurisdictions. We
renew our commitment to deny safe haven to the proceeds of corruption and to the
recovery and restitution of stolen assets.
80. We extend the mandate of the Anti-Corruption Working Group for two
years to the end of 2014 and request the Working Group to prepare a
comprehensive action plan, as well as a second Working Group Monitoring Report,
both to be presented for consideration and adoption by Sherpas by the end of
2012.
Other paragraphs
81. In light of the interconnectedness of the world economy, the G20 has
led to a new paradigm of multilateral co-operation that is necessary in order to
tackle current and future challenges effectively. The informal and flexible
character of the G20 enables it to facilitate international economic and
financial cooperation, and address the challenges confronting the global
economy. It is important that we continue to further improve the transparency
and effectiveness of the G20, and ensure that it is able to respond to pressing
needs. As a contribution to this, in line with the commitment made in Cannes,
Sherpas have developed a set of evolving G20 working practices.
82. An informal meeting of G20 Ministers of Foreign Affairs was held in Los
Cabos in February, which explored the ways in which G20 member countries could
contribute more effectively to address key challenges in global
governance.
83. Recognizing the far-reaching impact of G20 decisions, we welcome the
extensive outreach efforts undertaken by the Mexican Presidency, including the
meetings of Business-20, Labor-20, Youth-20, and Think-20. We will continue
developing efforts with non-members, regional and international organizations,
including the UN and other actors. In line with the Cannes mandate, in order to
ensure our outreach remains consistent and effective, we welcome a set of
principles in this area, developed by Sherpas.
84. We thank international organizations, including the UN, IMF, World
Bank, WTO, FSB, ILO, FAO, and OECD, as well as civil society, for their input
into the G20 process. Their reports and recommendations have provided valuable
inputs to G20 discussions, in areas ranging from sustainable development to
financial regulation.
Conclusion
85. We look forward to the rest of the work that will take place during
Mexico's Presidency until November 30. On 1 December, 2012, Russia will start
chairing the G20. We will convene in St. Petersburg, under the Chairmanship of
Russia. We thank Mexico for hosting a successful Los Cabos Summit.
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State.)
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