UN / DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION FORUM OPENING

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"There is no place for duplication, there is no place for inefficiency and there is no place for needless competition for scarce dollars," ECOSOC President Bob Rae said as the UN’s Development Cooperation Forum opened in New York. "We have to find a way to establish a more cooperative, efficient, and effective system than the one that currently exists." UNIFEED
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STORY: UN / DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION FORUM OPENING
TRT: 03:38
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGES: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 12 MARCH 2025, NEW YORK CITY / FILE

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Shotlist

FILE – NEW YORK CITY

1. Wide shot, United Nations headquarters

12 MARCH 2025, NEW YORK CITY

2. Wide shot, ECOSOC Chamber
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Bob Rae, President, the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC):
“Facing inevitable scarcity, we need to ensure that our collective dollars translate into higher impact activities that are truly joined up and that are mutually reinforcing. Now more than ever, I might have to say this sentence twice, but now more than ever, there is no place for duplication. There's no place for inefficiency and there's no place for needless competition for scarce dollars. We have to find a way to establish a more cooperative, efficient and effective system than the one that currently exists.”
4. Wide shot, representatives of Member States
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Bob Rae, President, the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC):
“At the notion that this is somehow a UN alone project, or UN and nation state project alone is wrong. It has to include in an integral way what the IFIs are doing at every level, and what the private sector is doing at every level. And we have to think through this question in a way that we've not done so much before.”
6. Wide shot, representatives of Member States
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Li Junhua, the Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs:
Too many countries are burden to unsustainable debt, shrinking fiscal space and fragmented development system that does not align with urgent needs and priorities. In this dysfunctional system, women and girls bear a heaviest burden, facing disproportionate impacts that threaten to erase decades of the hard on the progress on gender equality. This trajectory is unsustainable. A major paradigm shifter is needed.”
8. Wide shot, ECOSOC Chamber
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Navid Hanif, the Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development in the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA):
“The report makes clear that we are at a decisive moment for International Development Cooperation. Together with the Development Cooperation Survey Study, the report, delivers an unambiguous verdict, the Global Development Cooperation system is not effectively responding to the needs and priorities of developing countries and local communities at the front lines for our efforts to achieve the sustainable development goals.”
10. Wide shot, representatives of Member States
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Cristina Duarte, Under-Secretary-General, Special Adviser on Africa:
“Globalization has bound economies together, yet the multilateral institutions designed to regulate its forces are struggling to keep up. The current economic order has allowed wealth to accumulate in unprecedented ways, but it has also widened inequalities (as Mr. President named it), weakened states (the reason for the call of Mr. President) and marginalize billions of people.”
12. Wide shot, representatives of Member States
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Cristina Duarte, Under-Secretary-General, Special Adviser on Africa:
“We live a paradox. We are in the side of rule that we have the responsibility. But the financial resources are not in that side of the world financial resources are in a different side.”

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Storyline

“There is no place for duplication, inefficiency, or needless competition for scarce dollars,” ECOSOC President Bob Rae said Wednesday, as the UN’s Development Cooperation Forum opened in New York. “We have to find a way to establish a more cooperative, efficient, and effective system than the one that currently exists.”

With nearly 600 million people projected to remain in extreme poverty by 2030 and developing countries facing annual sustainable development financing gaps of up to $4 trillion, officials warned that the global development cooperation system is falling short at a time of urgent need.

At the opening of the Forum, Rae emphasized that development cooperation must move beyond UN and state-led efforts to fully integrate international financial institutions and private sector contributions. “At the notion that this is somehow a UN alone project, or UN and nation state project alone is wrong. It has to include in an integral way what the IFIs are doing at every level, and what the private sector is doing at every level,” he said.

Li Junhua, UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs, underscored the impact of an increasingly fragmented system. “Too many countries are burdened by unsustainable debt, shrinking fiscal space, and a fragmented development system that does not align with urgent needs and priorities,” he said. “In this dysfunctional system, women and girls bear the heaviest burden, facing disproportionate impacts that threaten to erase decades of hard-won progress on gender equality.”

The Report of the Secretary-General on trends and progress in international development cooperation presented at the Forum highlighted stark realities. Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development Navid Hanif stated that the global development cooperation system is “not effectively responding to the needs and priorities of developing countries and local communities at the front lines for our efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.”

Cristina Duarte, Under-Secretary-General and Special Adviser on Africa, pointed to the broader systemic failures of the global economy. “Globalization has bound economies together, yet the multilateral institutions designed to regulate its forces are struggling to keep up,” she said. “The current economic order has allowed wealth to accumulate in unprecedented ways, but it has also widened inequalities…weakened states … and marginalize billions of people.”

She highlighted a paradox at the heart of development finance. “We live a paradox. We are in the side of rule that we have the responsibility. But the financial resources are not in that side of the world. Financial resources are in a different side,” she said, pointing to the imbalance between decision-making power and financial capital in the global system.

The Forum convenes ahead of the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development, set for June 30 to July 3, where Member States will discuss potential reforms to the development cooperation architecture. The Forum’s recommendations will contribute to these discussions, aiming to ensure that international funding mechanisms better serve the world’s most vulnerable populations.

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