Ethiopia Steers Continental Agenda at International Conference on Financing for Development in Africa.

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Addis Ababa: Ethiopia is hosting the regional consultation for the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Africa. The consultation serves as a crucial event for African stakeholders to come together, align their views, and craft a unified African voice on critical issues related to financing development on the continent.

According to Ethiopian News Agency, Ethiopia’s State Minister of Finance, Semereta Sewasew, has officially opened the Regional Consultation for the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD) in Africa. The State Minister mentioned that Africa faces unique challenges that require tailored solutions to bridge the financing gaps, which include breaking the cycle of excessive debt service and ensuring sustainable debt management, addressing systemic issues causing macroeconomic imbalances, and harnessing innovative climate financing mechanisms to support Africa’s urgent needs for mitigation, adaptation, and resilience building.

Semereta has also
highlighted the importance of international cooperation to collectively tackle the regional challenges through Official Development Assistance (ODA) while African countries should enhance their Domestic Resource Mobilization (DRM) capacity to take full ownership of their development agenda. The State Minister has also highlighted the ongoing transformative efforts of Ethiopia to increase DRM through tax reforms, strengthen the public-private partnership model, and operationalize the Securities Exchange.

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), Executive Secretary Claver Gatete said Africa faces a financing gap of 1.3 trillion USD every year to meet its sustainable development goals by 2030, which requires a unified response. In this regard, the consultation emphasized that a collective voice for Africa to deal with debt, improved public finance management, domestic resource mobilization, more concessional loans, climate finance, and private sector and MSMEs development are among the major steps
to bridge the financing deficit.

In addition, improving public financial management and prioritizing investments in infrastructure, energy, transport, and human capital have also been raised as crucial responses to the growing financing gaps.