Dr. Rania Al-Mashat Participates in Several Events on Expanding Fiscal Space for Developing Countries, National Frameworks and Platforms, and Aligning Capital Flows with SDGs
02 July 2025
As part of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development in Spain…
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat Participates in Several Events on Expanding Fiscal Space for Developing Countries, National Frameworks and Platforms, and Aligning Capital Flows with SDGs
The Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation stresses the significance of implementing the recommendations of the UN expert group report to resolve the debt crisis in Global South countries
Al-Mashat: The 4th International Conference on Financing for Development represents a pivotal moment for fulfilling the international community's commitments for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals
We Look forward to the conference contributing to concrete steps toward restructuring the global financial system
Rising debt and declining investment are undermining developing and emerging countries’ ability to catch up. It is essential to overcome global challenges and return to a multilateral development cooperation system
The current global financial system exacerbates disparities in capital flows and limits financing opportunities for developing countries
As part of her ongoing participation in the Fourth
International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, Spain, within
the Egyptian delegation headed by H.E. Prime Minister Dr. Mostafa Madbouly, on
behalf of H.E. President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, President of the Arab Republic of
Egypt, H.E. Dr. Rania A. Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic Development
and International Cooperation, participated in a number of events concerning
expanding fiscal space for developing countries, national frameworks and
platforms, aligning capital flows with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),
and a new vision for debt.
Expanding Fiscal Space for Developing Countries and a New
Vision for Debt
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat participated in a panel titled
"Expanding Fiscal Space: A New Vision for Debt and Development
Finance," with the participation of Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin, Chair of the UN
Expert Group on Debt and the UN Special Envoy on Financing the 2030 Sustainable
Development Agenda; Ms. Rola Dashti, Executive Secretary of the Economic and
Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA); and Ms. Zuzana Brixiova, Director
of Macroeconomics, Finance and Governance Division at the UN Economic
Commission for Africa (UNECA).
The Minister of Planning, Economic Development and
International Cooperation emphasized that the 4th International Conference on
Financing for Development represents a pivotal moment for fulfilling the
international community's commitments for achieving SDGs, particularly after
the successive crises the world is facing, which undermine the ability of
developing and emerging countries to meet the requirements of the development
path.
H.E. Minister Al-Mashat highlighted the importance of
implementing the recommendations of theUN expert group's report on solving the
debt problem in Global South countries.
These included 11 key recommendations, among them:
redirecting and renewing resources of existing funds in multilateral
development banks and the International Monetary Fund to enhance liquidity,
adopting policies to extend maturities and finance loan repurchases, reducing
debt service during crises, reforming the G20 Common Framework to include all
middle-income countries, and reforming the Debt Sustainability Analyses (DSA)
of the IMF and World Bank to better reflect the situation of low and
middle-income countries, among other recommendations.
H.E. Dr. Al-Mashat expressed her aspiration that the 4th
International Conference on Financing for Development will contribute to taking
concrete steps towards restructuring the global financial system, which has
become inadequate for the magnitude of challenges and changes facing developing
and emerging countries. She noted that rising debts and decreasing investments
undermine the ability of developing and emerging countries to catch up. She
also stressed the need to overcome global challenges and return to the
multilateral development cooperation system.
H.E. Dr. Al-Mashat reiterated Egypt’s efforts to promote
financing for development through innovative mechanisms such as debt swap
programs with Germany and Italy, and the signing of a new agreement with China.
She pointed to the credibility and trust between Egypt and international
financing institutions, which facilitated the mobilization of more than $15.6
billion in development financing for the private sector since 2020.
Reforming the Global Financial Architecture: Aligning
Capital Flows with Development and Climate Goals
In a related context, H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat participated
in a high-level session titled "Reforming the International Financial
Architecture: Aligning Capital Flows with Development and Climate Goals,"
organized by the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI), the
Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), and the Belt and Road Green
Development Council (BRIGC).
Participants included Professor Jeffrey Sachs, President of
the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN); Mr. Claver Gatete,
Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA); Professor
Kevin Urama, Chief Economist of the African Development Bank; and Ms. Carla
Louveira, Minister of Finance of Mozambique, among others.
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat reaffirmed that achieving inclusive
and sustainable development in the African continent cannot be based solely on
borrowing or on mobilizing domestic resources. Instead, it is essential to
integrate both approaches to ensure sufficient and sustainable financing for
development projects.
H.E. Minister Al-Mashat also emphasized that Egypt is
working to achieve a delicate balance between domestic and international
financing, guided by a clear vision that mobilizing domestic resources supports
sustainability, while international partnerships provide momentum for
implementing major strategic projects.
Regarding the global financial structure,H.E. Dr. Al-Mashat
added that the current international financial system has led to a deepening of
the disparity in capital flows between developing, emerging, and developed
countries, and limits financing opportunities in southern countries. She
asserted that developing countries, especially African nations, still bear
unfair financial burdens due to the high cost of financing compared to
developed countries, and this disparity weakens our ability to achieve the SDGs
within set timelines.
H.E. Minister Al-Mashat mentioned that capital flows are
moving in the opposite direction, away from the countries with the greatest needs, despite the
high-return investment opportunities these countries offer. She underscored that
instead of capital flowing towards high-yield development opportunities, we
observe outflows due to increased risks associated with global fluctuations,
which limits the ability of countries to attract long-term financing. She
concluded that serious reforms are urgently needed in the international
financial system.