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Pacific Regionalism and Stronger Regional Institutions : Paving Opportunities for ADFIP

Explore the changing global landscape and the role of Pacific regionalism in economic development. Discover the potential for stronger regional institutions to create opportunities for the ADFIP.

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Pacific Regionalism and Stronger Regional Institutions : Paving Opportunities for ADFIP

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  1. Pacific Regionalism and Stronger Regional Institutions :Paving Opportunities for ADFIP Dr. Raymond N. Prasad Economic Adviser Economic Policy & Development Finance Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat

  2. Outline Change Global Landscape Pacific Regionalism Regionalism & Development Finance Opportunties for ADFIP

  3. Changing Global Landscape • Global Economy • Increased uncertainty in the short-to-medium term • BREXIT & US Elections • Focus will be on more inward looking economic policies • Progress in global market  slow or future not clear • Asia-Pacific – Biggest Concern is the Chinese Economy • Ramifications of the Chinese economic volatility: • Asian exporters to China • In the region  Australia & New Zealand  Implicitly to Pacific Island Economies • Q: What does this have to do with Regionalism?

  4. Changing Global Landscape • Q: What does this have to do with Regionalism? • Global Economy is “Nature” whileRegionalism is “Nurture” • Regionalism is our key “Adaptation strategy” on our terms • PICs too small to impact alone but as a group represent a significant force in the global economy • Some Examples: • Global Recognition of “SIDS Group” and its challenges • Paris Agreement on Climate Change • Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific (Forum Leaders’ Priority) • Parties to the Nauru Agreement – Fishing Revenues in PNA countries (Forum Leaders’ Priority) • Disaster Risk Insurance – PCRAFI Foundation + Multi-donor trust fund (Germany, US, Japan, UK)

  5. Pacific Regionalism • Regionalism is essential and ultimate strategy in navigating the global economy and geo-politics • its’ not a smooth path either! • Pacific Regionalism has undergone is own fair share of criticism, costs and reforms • These are essential in mechanism design for regionalism • fit for purpose, dynamic, sensitive to a number of innate and external factors • No system is perfect you have to make it perfect and fit for purpose • Pacific Plan  Framework for Pacific Regionalism represents • the commitment and process to make it much more inclusive, transparent and accountable public policy process

  6. Regionalism & Dev. Finance • Regionalism essential for PICs: • Solution to deliver Regional Public Goods • Alternative to an unachievable global solution • Regionalism  Sustainable Dev. Finance? • Cross-border investments and technology transfers • Potential for new regional financial mechanisms South-South investments (PNG and Fiji) Creating a regional market  ↓ diseconomies Regionalism  functional cooperation/integration Regional value chains and/or production sharing Harmonisation of financial regulation Elimination of nontariff barriers and dysfunctional regulatory asymmetries Cooperation and coordination in the area of macroeconomic policy New regional financial mechanisms: regional finance facility mobilise domestic savings across region develop regional capital markets Reduce risk  Risk pooling (Macro/Micro) Financing basic services infrastructure, energy, transport and ICT sectors warrant strong regional frameworks for improved outcomes

  7. Pacific Regionalism • Regionalism is essential and ultimate strategy in navigating the global economy and geo-politics • its’ not a smooth path either! • Pacific Regionalism has undergone is own fair share of criticism, costs and reforms • These are essential in mechanism design for regionalism • fit for purpose, dynamic, sensitive to a number of innate and external factors • No system is perfect you have to make it perfect and fit for purpose • Pacific Plan  Framework for Pacific Regionalism represents • the commitment and process to make it much more inclusive, transparent and accountable public policy process

  8. Opportunities for ADFIP • Opportunities within the Economy • Core role: financing development • Extended Core Role • Economic Stabilisation • Policy Intervention and time consistency –Impact on Credit Cycles  “Minsky Effect” • Policy Coordination – Central Banks and/or Government • Core ”node” in the Domestic Financing Network • Most countries started with the Development Bank “Node” (Commercial Banks followed) • Sectoral Intelligence – focus on what works

  9. Economic Growth & Resilience Kernel Density of Real GDP Rate (%) 2004-2015 Level of Economic Growth Minimising Dispersion is Resilience Dispersion

  10. Economic Growth & Resilience Box Plot of Real GDP Rate (%) 2004-2015 Min. Max. 3 Qtl 1 Qtl median Outliers mean

  11. Opportunities for ADFIP • Opportunities within the Economy • Alleviating Financial stress + Counterparty risk • Look at and support Regional Options: • Why domestic taxpayers should finance regional projects? • Why not? • Bottom line  Profit - Increase the shareholder (Gov’t) value • Diversifies portfolio • All economic shocks are not same & how it impacts each PICs varies! • Ability to cross subsidise domestic “high cost” operations

  12. Opportunities for ADFIP • Opportunities in the Region • Climate Change Finance • Blending Mechanisms • Sectoral Finance • Regional Economic Intelligence • Mitigating Risk and Uncertainty • Collaboration in other Regional Initiatives • CC Fragility & Grant Allocations • PIFS & WBG IDA Allocations • Financial Inclusion + Remittances • Private Sector Development (PS Dialogue + Proposal ACP Dev. Bank) • Economic Empowerment of Women • Role of • Development Banks (+DFIs) • MDBs + Donors

  13. Financing Opportunities - ADFIP • Increasing investment in Economic resilience # Disaster Insurance - PCRAFI # Contingent Credit/Savings # Community Insurance # BoPSupport (MSG) # Regional Finance Facility (FEMM))

  14. Thank You.

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