270 likes | 411 Views
Knots, Solutions, and Governance Conundrums Barrie Stevens OECD/International Futures Programme Poland and Regions – the Perspectives of development in the XXI Century IV Warsaw Conference, 24-25 October 2008. A Global Outreach. OECD Member Countries.
E N D
Knots, Solutions, and Governance Conundrums Barrie Stevens OECD/International Futures Programme Poland and Regions – the Perspectives of development in the XXI Century IV Warsaw Conference, 24-25 October 2008
A Global Outreach OECD Member Countries Countries/Economies Engaged in Working Relationships with the OECD
OECD : Key Tasks • Promote policies to achieve sustainable economic growth and employment and rising standards of living in member countries, and contribute to the development of the world economy. • Help member governments address the economic, social and environmental challenges of globalisation. • Provide a setting where governments can compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practice, and work to co-ordinate domestic and international policies. • Strategic foresight helps underpin the fulfilment of these tasks by identifying future policy issues (threats and opportunities) and encouraging early thinking and timely action.
Fundamental global trends • Population growth and ageing • Gravitational shift in poles of economic growth • Rising number of important players in the world economy • Uncertainties of climate change • Growing interconnectedness
Examples of recent OECD IFP work related to the “Gordian Knots” • Global Infrastructure Investment Requirements to 2030 (the case of water) • The Bioeconomy to 2030 (the case of food and agriculture) • The Future of International Migration (the case of competition for talent)
Estimated average annual world infrastructure investment requirements 2003-2030 (additions and renewal) In USD Bn and as a percentage of world GDP 1. Estimates apply to the years 2005, 2015 and 2025. 2. Transmission and distribution only. 3. Only OECD countries, Russia, China, India and Brazil are considered here. Table 1 p 29 - Infrastructure to 2030: Telecom, Land Transport, Water and Electricity (2006)
Water stress by major water basins in 2000 and 2030 Source: OECD Environment Directorate (2006), Working Party on Global and Structural Policies, Revised environmental baseline for the OECD environmental outlook to 2030, 20-21 November 2006, ENV/EPOC/GSP(2006)23
Two track approach to bridging the water infrastructure gap • Find additional funding and develop innovative approaches to finance (public and private) • Use infrastructure more efficiently and more intelligently through more demand management, improved strategic planning, more effective governance, and improved integration of existing and new technologies. • Requires major international effort with wide range of countries, not least in Africa, Middle East, Central Asia, South and SE Asia…)
The Bioeconomy to 2030 : health, industry, and food & agriculture applications
Drivers for agricultural production Increasing Affluence Population Climate Change Biofuels
Scale of the challenge • Per capita world grain production to increase from 305kg in 2000 to 340kg in 2030 (2.8 billion tonnes) • Average consumption in developed countries is twice this amount • Consumption in developing countries is increasing • Per capita meat consumption in China increased from 20kg in 1980 to 50kg in 2007 • If everyone adopts a European diet, there will be a shortfall of 2.3 billion tonnes • Assumes no grain use for biofuels • Assumes no change in yields due to climate change
By 2030, bulk of agbio production and R&D will have moved to developing countries • Strong evidence that European agbio R&D has slowed down significantly • Developing country activity has increased • Of the 8 countries planting more than a million ha of GM crops, 6 are non-OECD countries (Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Paraguay, South Africa) • Over 550 biotech field trials have occurred in 47 non-OECD countries • Major agricultural biotechnology programmes
Concentration has been intense Percent of all GM field trial applications by leading firms Source:OECD, based on the UNU-MERIT GM Field trial database Notes: (1) The top five firms in 2004-2007 were Monsanto, Targeted Growth, DuPont-Pioneer Hibred, Bayer Crop Science, and Syngenta.
International cooperation • Given the geographic imbalance between supply and demand, trade access will be paramount • Cooperation and joint ventures for R&D, particularly to adapt technologies to local conditions, will be essential - Robust global competition will help ensure that R&D is efficient
Major migration patterns in the early 21st Century Source: United Nations
Factors favouring future migration flows to OECD countries • Persistent income level differentials • Poor social infrastructures (health, education etc.) • War and civil unrest • Poor governance • Climate change and natural disasters
Factors impeding future migration flows to OECD countries • Fast growth in key non-OECD economies to 2030, making for growing appetite for labour • Improved education and research facilities in non-OECD countries • Improved health and social infrastructures • Emerging economies as attractors and retainers of highly skilled manpower • Growing competition for global labour supplies
International co-operation to manage migration flows • Labour migration – skilled and unskilled - to alleviate labour shortages and the adverse impact of ageing populations in OECD countries • Controlling irregular migration • Securing successful integration of immigrants and their children • Making best use of the human capital of immigrants • Strengthening co-operation between countries with respect to migration and development • Managing adverse effects of the “talent crunch”
The Governance Conundrum (1) • Three different examples of global issues requiring stronger international co-operation, each involving wide range of countries in different configurations. • Reflects globalisation where both opportunities and responsibilities are more widely shared. • Representativeness and inclusiveness required to address the diversity of countries and issues and claim legitimacy and credibility. • But how to be inclusive and effective?
The Governance Conundrum (2) • Is there a trade-off between universality and effectiveness? • In the current climate, is it then more important to be effective than legitimate? • New fixed architecture or variable geometry? • Personal relations and institutional memory are key, but in which setting are they more effective? • OECD experience
Thank you. Barrie Stevens barrie.stevens@oecd.org