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Susan Harris Rimmer - Does the G20 offer a pathway to end poverty?
1. Does the G20 offer a pathway to end
poverty?
Susan Harris Rimmer, Asia-Pacific College of
Diplomacy
2. Overview
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Why was the G20 created
Who is the G20
What does it do?
Why it is important
Challenges ahead – legitimacy and
performance
Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy
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4. Why is the Group of 20 important?
G20 members represent almost:
1. 90% of global GDP.
2. 80% of international global-trade.
3. 2/3 of the world's population lives in G20 member
countries.
4. 84% of all fossil fuel emissions are produced by G20
countries.
Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy
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5. Why is the Group of 20 important?
The G20 as the embodiment of a rapid change in global
power balance.
•Combined BRIC’s GDP rose from $2.5 trillion in 2000 to
$9 trillion in 2010 despite the GFC. 1 Now comprises 85%
of global GDP.
•BRIC’s will be four of the five largest economies by
2050.
•East Asia grew by 50% from 2007-11. Europe grew by
3%.
•97% of global population growth to 2030 will be in
emerging economies. 3% in the West.
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6. Why is the Group of 20 important?
•An additional 2 billion people will join the global middle
class by 2030, nearly all from G20 emerging economies.2
•Emerging G20 economies are the key demand side
pressure point for control of land, water, energy, minerals
and carbon space, with profound implications for
environmental sustainability & conflict.
•Key multilateral processes at an impasse due to
reluctance of G7 to acknowledge new power dynamics
(WTO, UNFCCC).
•BRICS FDI is unprecedented. China $400 billion in 350
acquisitions between 2005 and 2011. 3
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7. Why is the Group of 20 important?
•BRICS Bank proposal to rival the World Bank reviewed at
March 2013 BRICS Summit.
•Barry Carin – lever of progress
•Andrew Cooper - crisis committee to steering committee
•On its way to economic version of Security Council?
•Political power regulating globalisation?
•Rich countries staying rich?
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G8 - Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, United Kingdom, and the United States.
Plus ‘structurally important’ states:
Australia and Saudi Arabia
9 emerging market countries: Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, and Turkey
the European Union
Women lag far behind men in access to land, credit and decent jobs, even though a growing body of research shows that enhancing women’s economic options boosts national economies. Macroeconomic policies and policy-making can make the connections to gender equality. The multiple barriers that prevent women from seizing economic opportunities must be dropped. Economic policies and institutions still mostly fail to take gender disparities into account, from tax and budget systems to trade regimes. And with too few seats at the tables where economic decisions are made, women themselves have limited opportunity to influence policy.