Tag Archives: financial crisis

Greek financial crisis: A distraction from the G20 agenda

Asanku Muleta Ethiopia

Will the G20 consider issues that matter to the world's poorest people?

Former CAFOD partner, Miniva Chibuye discusses the implications of the G20 meeting in Cannes.

The G20 leaders have started their meeting in Cannes expecting to make important decisions on global development. Surprisingly, despite the St Paul’s and Wall Street protests against financial greed, things seem eerily calm in Cannes. The leaders from the 20 leading economies have been left to themselves to make decisions that ultimately will impact on the lives of the world’s seven billion people. Continue reading

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Robin Hood Tax: Some answers to critics

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As the dust settles after the launch of the Robin Hood Tax campaign in the first week of February, it is not surprising that our critics are beginning to bite back. Especially as some sectors see a potential sting for profits.

 Whilst fuller responses are being posted on the Robin Hood campaign website, it’s worth looking at some of the misperceptions behind some of the criticisms. Continue reading

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Opinion: Robin Hood Tax

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This blog is an extract from the Pope Paul VI Memorial Lecture, given by the Rt. Hon. Shirley Williams

The banking and financial crisis that has hit much of the world undermines the central hypothesis of a dogma that is almost a religion, the efficient market hypothesis.

This hypothesis holds that free markets are self-correcting, and should not be interfered with. In the name of that dogma, governments in the West removed regulations, softened the rules, permitted the taking of risk beyond what would have been earlier accepted and in effect pushed the market system to its limits.

There are also unmet aid targets that are well known to CAFOD and have become the mantra of thousands of good people intent on serving the Common Good. They have translated that intent into practical objectives, like redeeming debt and like the Millennium Development Goals.

But those goals are a long way from being met. On the basis of the current aid budget, the Millennium goals will take a long time to achieve.

Except for one thing. There is one tax that would enable us not only to pay our debts, but to increase aid to the developing world and subsidise cleaner, greener technologies of energy generation. These might then rescue our fragile planet from the spread of deserts, the scarcity of pure water, the rising of sea levels and the floods that today threaten it. Continue reading

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Robin Hood Tax: Getting angry or making merry?

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At last year’s Put People First rally, I marched alongside a banker. Mind you, he took a while to admit that to me. Bankers aren’t the most popular people at the moment. Especially on a march calling for a reform of the economic system in order to tackle poverty.

As we walked through the streets of London under a CAFOD banner, he explained to me how the City is “very paranoid about violent demonstrations”. Then he looked around at the crowds. “But here are thousands of people on a peaceful march, showing solidarity, not anger.” Continue reading

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Financial crisis: Lessons we missed

Despite a recognition that poor countries will be hardest hit by the crisis even though they did not cause it, the development perspective has been largely absent from G20 debate, and therefore the political response to the financial crisis so far.

CAFOD partner NGO Forum on Cambodia met with European Policy makers at the European Development Days, in October, funded by DFID and BOND,  as part of an effort to address this gap. They urged that “no country should be left behind” in the global recovery.

Developing countries have not been completely ignored. Unprecedented commitments by the G20 to examine innovative financing, efforts to put their own houses in order and support for protecting the poorest will help developing countries overcome the impacts of the global downturn, but they are only part of the picture. Continue reading

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