Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation delivers Egypt’s address at the roundtable on “Revitalizing international development cooperation”
02 July 2025
During her participation in the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development in Spain:
Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation delivers Egypt’s address at the roundtable on “Revitalizing international development cooperation”
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat: Developing and least developed countries bear the brunt of the global debt crisis, leading to widening development gaps.
The need to develop effective proposals to enhance concessional financing and create more innovative mechanisms.
We look forward to the conference will yield impactful recommendations that advance the financing agenda for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic
Development, and International Cooperation, delivered Egypt’s speech at the
multilateral roundtable titled “Revitalizing international development
cooperation”, on behalf of H.E. Dr. Mostafa Madbouly, Prime Minister of Egypt,
during the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development held
in Spain from June 29 to July 3, 2025.
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat explained that the current period is
witnessing a significant decline in progress toward achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals, due to escalating geopolitical tensions and multiple ongoing
crises, which has resulted in successive negative impacts, especially on
developing and least developed countries, which bear the heaviest burden of the
global debt crisis leading to a widening and deepening gap between developed
and developing countries day by day.
H.E. added that the 4th International Conference on
Financing for Development represents an important opportunity to reaffirm the
existence of genuine political will to address the situation and to discuss
effective proposals that would enhance concessional financing, support existing
financial mechanisms, including Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), as well as
develop new mechanisms to mobilize the required financing.
The Minister of Planning, Economic Development and
International Cooperation pointed out that among these mechanisms,
development-linked debt instruments are an example of financial instruments
that can contribute to stimulate funding linked to development priorities,
affirming the importance of donor countries' commitment to their pledges to
developing countries, adding that the challenges faced by developing countries
are also beginning to affect many middle-income countries, which face the
risk of undermine the progress they have achieved due to the worsening global
debt situation.
Al-Mashat emphasized the need to focus on priority
sectors, such as health and education, while making concerted efforts to
alleviate debt burdens, which can be achieved by implementing sustainable
mechanisms that contribute to supporting developing countries in a
integrated manner.
In conclusion of her speech, H.E. stated that the conversation should not be limited to increasing the volume of financing alone, but should also focus on capacity building of countries, so that they are able to work effectively to achieve their national priorities and implementing their development strategies independently and sustainably, expressing her hope that the conference would come out with concrete recommendations capable of making a real, positive impact in advancing the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.