Pacific prepares for high level Economic, Trade meetings

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    Pacific post COVID-19 recovery and climate change are expected to dominate a series of back-to-back high level Pacific Forum meetings planned for next week.

    Agenda items, themes, and papers for Forum economic and trade ministerial meetings are being finalised this week by officials across the region. Finance and economic officials hope to complete discussions today aimed at setting the agenda for the annual Finance and Economic Ministerial meeting, from July 13th to 14th.

    Today, 08 July, Pacific members of the Brussels-based Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) will convene virtually to do the same for a Pacific ACP ministerial, next Thursday 15 July. And this Friday 09 July, Forum Trade officials will discuss high-level agenda for next week’s Forum Trade Ministerial Meeting on 16 July.

    A central theme of building back Pacific economic resilience and competitiveness post COVID-19, sharing on the broad range of impacts and recovery from the pandemic, and the shift from business as usual is likely to lead many agenda items. In opening comments to the Forum economic pre-ministerial meetings this week, Forum Secretary General Henry Puna noted the substantive increases in debt levels as Governments have fought to combat the economic and health fall-out of the pandemic.

    “We the Pacific people, are resilient people. We have faced many challenges in our history, and we have always fought back, and won back. I believe that now is no exception. We will fight back, together, and we will win back, together,” SG Puna said.

    He noted the Pacific Resilience Facility as a “stellar example of what we can achieve together if only we put our minds to it and collectively inspire solutions that address our unique circumstances.”

    Speaking of the sobering impacts of COVID-19 and the climate crisis on the Pacific, SG Puna said the challenges “must not stop us from being proactive, to innovate and develop home- grown solutions for the good of our Blue Pacific Continent and our people.”

    Urging officials to use their meeting to develop solid recommendations, he acknowledged their input and guidance to the ministerial meetings.

    Forum Trade and Economic Ministers will meet in a joint session on 16 July, putting the economic, trade, and related priorities to be aligned in the development of the 2050 Strategy for the Blue Pacific Continent, into a regional and global context to help next steps and directions beyond the pandemic.

    SOUURCE: PIFS/PACNEWS