From 30 November to 1 December 2016 the Secretariat of the Committee for Development Policy (CDP) is organizing an expert group meeting (EGM) in Geneva to discuss lessons learned by selected least developed countries (LDCs) and developing countries in building their productive capacities for sustainable development.
Documents
Agenda
List of Participants
Consolidated Background Paper
Presentations
Welcome - Roland Mollerus
Session 1: LDC graduation toolkit: an update - Daniel Gay
Session 2: Analytical framework - Matthias Bruckner
Session 3: Case studies of natural resource exploiting countries - Roland Mollerus
Session 3: Comments - Rashid Hassan
Session 4: Small island developing states…
CDP Expert Group meeting on lessons learned in developing productive capacity in graduated and graduating countries
On 2 December 2016 the Secretariat of the Committee for Development Policy (CDP) is organizing an expert group consultation in Geneva to explain the concept behind the LDC graduation toolkit; solicit feedback and establish possible partnerships.
Documents
Agenda and Background Note
List of Participants
Expert Group Consultation on the LDC Graduation Diagnostics Toolkit
Surge in global bond issuance may pose a risk to the global economy
Saudi Arabia raises $17.5 billion in record sovereign bond sale by an emerging economy
Egypt devalues pound to alleviate persistent foreign currency shortages
?Global issues
Surge in global bond issuance may pose a risk to the global economy
Amid historic low yields in most parts of the world and continued bond-purchasing programmes by major central banks, year-to-date data suggest global bond issuance in 2016 has continued the rapid pace seen in recent years, especially among developing countries. Saudi Arabia, for example, recently raised $17.5 billion in the largest-ever bond sale by an emerging economy (see the…
World Economic Situation And Prospects: November 2016 Briefing, No. 96
The ePing system, an SPS and TBT notification alert system developed by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) in cooperation with the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the International Trade Center (ITC), is officially launched on 8 November 2016 at the WTO, by UN DESA Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development Lenni Montiel, WTO Deputy Director General Karl Brauner and the Executive Director of ITC Arancha Gonz?lez.
ePing is designed to help government agencies and small and medium-sized enterprises keep track of the latest information on regulatory requirements for international trade. It provides free, timely updates on new sanitary and phytosanitary…
From 24 to 27 October 2016, an UN expert team, comprising of the CDP, UNDP, UNCTAD and OHRLLS, conducted a joint mission in Luanda, Angola, to provide support to the Government of Angola on the graduation from the LDC category. The UN team held consultation meetings with various stakeholders and partners on the drafting of the National Roadmap for the Smooth Transition Strategy towards graduation from the list of LDCs.
On 27 October 2016 the high level workshop "Angola's Graduation from the Category of the LDCs: Challenges and Opportunities" was held with over 300 participants in order to identify the main steps for the country's graduation until February 2021.
Documents of the workshop on…
Mission to Angola: Support for the graduation from the LDC category
Government policymakers from 16 least developed countries (LDCs) and one graduate, Samoa, will gather in Beijing, China, from 10 to 12 November 2016 to discuss strategies needed to successfully graduate from LDC status and to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The workshop is organized by the Center for New Structural Economics at Peking University in collaboration with the Committee for Development Policy (CDP) Secretariat and co-sponsored by the Commonwealth Secretariat.
Information
Press release
Workshop summary
Related Background Papers
No. 35: Applying the Growth Identification and Facilitation Framework to Nepal
No. 32: Applying the Growth Identification and…
Workshop on Productive Capacity and LDC Graduation
CDP Policy Review No. 5
By Keith Nurse
The paper reviews the provisions within the WTO multilateral trade regime which impact on the policy space for LDCs which are interested in pursuing industrial policies as latecomers. It finds that LDCs are more constrained by lack of capacity rather than by WTO provisions, in contrast to more advanced developing countries.
The paper first provides a brief overview of the LDCs economies and export structures. Then it explores the debates and perspectives on industrial policy taking into account the requirements of multilateral trade policy. The next section looks specifically at the provisions within the WTO regime and assesses the scope for policy…
Industrial Policy, LDCs and the WTO Regime
CDP Policy Review No. 4
By Stephan Klasen, Inmaculada Mart?nez-Zarzoso, Felicitas Nowak-Lehmann and Matthias Bruckner
The paper investigates the effectiveness of trade preferences for LDCs. It confirms that overall trade preferences for LDCs increase LDC exports. However, it also finds that effectiveness differs across the nine providers included in the study (EU, US, Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, the Russian Federation and Turkey) and that only a subset of LDCs is able to benefit from trade preferences.
Trade Preferences for Least Developed Countries. Are they Effective? Preliminary Econometric Evidence
CDP Policy Review No. 3
By Tea Petrin
The paper overviews the evidence of good governance institutional reform agenda on the development outcomes of LDCs. For building development governance capacity in LDC for achieving sustainable development goals, successful examples suggest a few key common features: (1) existence of government/political leadership; (2) organizational set up for achieving national development goals; (3) structural transformation from poor human capital base and low quality of the bureaucracies. The lessons learned from these examples cannot simply be transmitted to other LDCs, but should be seen as practical policy lessons.
Building development governance capacity; policy learning
CDP Policy Review No. 2
By Keun Lee
The paper discusses two ways of building productive capacity in LDCs: the manufacture of products to foreign buyers? specifications, and the integration of resource-based sectors into global value chains using backward and forward linkages. Using country examples the paper then shows how government and the international community can support the growth of productive capacity in various ways including research institutes and public research organisations. The paper argues that some LDCs should try to leapfrog into newly emerging sectors such as renewable energy.
Development of technological capabilities for building productive capacity in LDCs