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UN Urges Reform to Fund $4 tr Annual Global Development Gap

GreenWatch Desk: Development 2025-06-22, 8:08pm

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Children plant flowers in a playground in N’Djamena, Chad as part of an education project.



According to the United Nations, the world needs an extra $4 trillion every year to tackle some of the world’s biggest challenges – ending poverty and hunger, fighting climate change, and reducing inequality.

These are part of 17 goals agreed by nearly every country, called the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The plan is to hit these targets by 2030.

But we’re falling behind. One big reason? There just isn’t enough consistent funding to make real progress.

That’s why world leaders, economists, and other decision-makers are meeting at the end of this month in Sevilla, Spain, for a major event called the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development. It’s being called a “once-in-a-decade opportunity” to rethink how the world pays for sustainable development.

What is financing for development?

At its core, financing for development works to answer a simple question – how does the world pay for a fairer and more balanced system of aid, trade, and development?

Traders in Madagascar, one of the most underdeveloped countries in Africa, transport charcoal to market.

The answer from the global community has been to create a system that mobilises the entire international financial architecture – taxes, subsidies, trade, financial and monetary policies — towards the development agenda.

The architecture aspires to be as inclusive as possible, engaging a wide array of funding sources and empowering countries to become more self-sufficient so their citizens can lead healthy, productive, prosperous, and peaceful lives.

Financing for development is basically about “changing the way the system works to make it so that developing countries are able to… actually invest in their futures,” Shari Spiegel, Director of Financing for Sustainable Development at the UN’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA), told UN News.

Among these sources of financing are multilateral development banks that provide financial and technical support to developing countries. Revised international and national trade and tax policies also work to jump-start developing economies.

And official development assistance (ODA) creates a channel through which aid from developed countries can flow directly to developing countries.

Why is financing for development important?

From rising debt and falling investment to shrinking aid and missed development goals, the current system is failing the people it is meant to serve.

People everywhere are paying the price:

Debt is rising, investment is falling, and donor aid is shrinking.

600 million people could still be living in extreme poverty by 2030 if we don’t change course, and it will take many more decades to reach the SDGs.

Today, 3.3 billion people live in countries that spend more on paying off debt than on health or education.

Moreover, billions of people will continue to live in countries that must prioritise debt payments over development.

That means less money for schools, hospitals, clean water, and jobs – the basics that people need to thrive.

And for the people who face the consequences of the world’s inaction, this is an unacceptable timeline.

What systemic changes need to be made?

With trade barriers growing and official development assistance decreasing annually, a business-as-usual approach to financing for development is unsustainable.

Work has begun on a rapid transit system connecting Delhi to Meerut in Uttar Pradesh, India.

The upcoming conference in Sevilla provides an opportunity to change course, to mobilise finance at scale and reform the rules of the system to put people’s needs at the centre.

The conference will bring together countries, civil society representatives, and financial experts to discuss new approaches to financing for development.

Crucially, this conference will also give developing countries a seat at the table, so their needs are addressed in international financial decision-making.

What role does debt play?

In the current financing system, developing countries continue to pay exorbitant amounts to service their debt while also facing borrowing costs which can be two to four times higher than those of developed counterparts.

These costs tend to rise especially during or directly after times of crisis, creating a feedback loop in which developing countries cannot afford to develop the very structures that would enable them to pay these costs.

“Faced with sky-high debt burdens and cost of capital, developing countries have limited prospects of financing the Sustainable Development Goals,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres said.

Children stand

The Secretary-General has said that it will take “big ideas” and “ambitious reforms” to get back on track to ending poverty, hunger, and inequality.

“[The conference] presents a unique opportunity to reform an international financial system that is outdated, dysfunctional, and unfair,” UN chief António Guterres has said.

Member States reached agreement on a draft that will launch an ambitious package of reforms and actions countries need to take to close the $4 trillion financing gap.

The United States pulled out of the conference process on Tuesday during final negotiations over the outcome document, saying that it couldn’t get on board with the draft.

Reform will come in part from effectively mobilising all stakeholders – private and public, formal and informal, developing and developed – and aligning their incentives and commitments towards a sustainable future.

This includes emphasising multilateralism as the foundation of all development, increasing taxes that direct public funds towards international development goals, lowering the cost of capital for developing countries, restructuring existing debt, and searching for even more innovative methods of finance.

“Sevilla is a moment in time. It's really the beginning, not the end of the process. So now the question is, how do we implement the commitments?” said Ms. Spiegel.

Reforming a broken financing system is challenging, but Ms. Spiegel is optimistic that multilateralism is up to the task.