Full text of G-8 summit communiqué
May 17, 1998
Web posted at: 4:48 p.m. EDT (2048 GMT)
BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) -- The following is the full
text of the communiqué issued Sunday by the leaders of the
Group of Eight countries at the end of their three-day
meeting in Birmingham, England:
1. We, the heads of state or government of eight major
industrialized democracies and the president of the European
Commission, met in Birmingham to discuss issues affecting
people in our own and other countries. In a world of
increasing globalization, we are ever more interdependent.
Our challenge is to build on and sustain the process of
globalization and to ensure that its benefits are spread more
widely to improve the quality of life of people everywhere.
We must also ensure that our institutions and structures keep
pace with the rapid technological and economic changes under
way in the world.
2. Of the major challenges facing the world on the threshold
of the 21st century, this summit has focused on three:
- Achieving sustainable economic growth and development
throughout the world in a way which, while safeguarding the
environment and promoting good governance, will enable
developing countries to grow faster and reduce poverty,
restore growth to emerging Asian economies and sustain the
liberalization of trade in goods and services and of
investment in a stable international economy;
- Building lasting growth in our own economies in which all
can participate, creating jobs and combating social
exclusion;
- Tackling drugs and transnational crime, which threaten to
sap this growth, undermine the rule of law and damage the
lives of individuals in all countries of the world.
Our aim in each case has been to agree to take concrete
actions to tackle these challenges.
Promoting sustainable global economic growth
3. In an interdependent world, we must work to build
sustainable economic growth in all countries. Global
integration is a process we have encouraged and shaped and
which is producing clear benefits for people throughout the
world. We welcomed the historic decisions taken on May 2 in
the establishment of the European Economic and Monetary
Union. We look forward to a successful EMU which contributes
to the health of the world economy. The commitment in
European Union countries to sound fiscal policies and
continuing structural reform is key to the long-term success
of EMU, and to improving the prospects for growth and
employment.
4. Overall global prospects remain good. However, since we
last met, the prospects have been temporarily set back by the
financial crisis in Asia. We confirm our strong support for
the efforts to re-establish stability and growth in the
region and for the key role of the International Financial
Institutions. Successful recovery in Asia will bring
important benefits for us all. Therefore:
- We strongly support reforms under way in the affected
countries and welcome the progress so far achieved. With full
implementation of programs agreed to with the IMF, we are
confident that stability can be restored. The underlying
factors that helped Asia achieve impressive growth in the
past remain in place. Implementation of agreed-to policies,
together with the action taken by ourselves and other
countries to avoid spillover effects, provide the basis for a
firm recovery in the region and renewed global stability.
- We believe a key lesson from events in Asia is the
importance of sound economic policy, transparency and good
governance. These improve the functioning of financial
markets, the quality of economic policymaking and public
understanding and support for sound policies, and thereby
enhance confidence. It is also important to ensure that the
private sector plays a timely and appropriate role in crisis
resolution.
- We are conscious of the serious impact of the crisis in the
region on the poor and most vulnerable. Economic and
financial reform needs to be matched with actions and
policies by the countries concerned to help protect these
groups from the worst effects of the crisis. We welcome the
support for this by the World Bank, the Asian Development
Bank and bilateral donors, and the increased emphasis on
social expenditure in programs agreed to by the IMF.
- We are concerned that the difficulties could trigger
short-term protectionist forces both in the region and in our
own countries. Such an approach would be highly damaging to
the prospects for recovery. We resolve to keep our own
markets open and call on other countries to do the same. We
emphasize the importance for the affected countries of
continued opening of their markets to investment and trade.
Open markets urged
5. Looking ahead to the WTO's celebration of the 50th
anniversary of the founding of the GATT (General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade) next week, we:
- Reaffirm our strong commitment to continued trade and
investment liberalization within the multilateral framework
of the WTO;
- Call on all countries to open their markets further and
resist protectionism;
- Strongly support the widening of the WTO's membership in
accordance with established WTO rules and practices;
- Agree to promote public support for the multilateral system
by encouraging greater transparency in the WTO, as in other
international organizations;
- To reaffirm our support for efforts to complete existing
multilateral commitments, push forward the built-in agenda
and tackle new areas in pursuing broad-based multilateral
liberalization;
- Confirm our wish to see emerging and developing economies
participate fully and effectively in the multilateral trade
system; commit ourselves to deliver early, tangible benefits
from this participation to help generate growth and alleviate
poverty in these countries; and undertake to help
least-developed countries by:
- a. providing additional duty-free access for their goods, if necessary on an autonomous basis,
- b. ensuring that rules of origin are transparent,
- c. assisting efforts to promote regional integration,
- d. helping their markets become more attractive and accessible to investment and capital flows.
6. The last point highlights one of the most difficult
challenges the world faces: to enable the poorer developing
countries, especially in Africa, develop their capacities,
integrate better into the global economy and thereby benefit
from the opportunities offered by globalization. We are
encouraged by the new spirit of hope and progress in Africa.
The challenges are acute, but confidence that they can be
overcome is growing. We commit ourselves to a real and
effective partnership in support of these countries' efforts
to reform, to develop, and to reach the internationally
agreed goals for economic and social development, as set out
in the OECD's 21st Century Strategy. We shall therefore work
with them to achieve at least primary education for children
everywhere, and to reduce drastically child and maternal
mortality and the proportion of the world's population living
in extreme poverty.
Support for Africa
7. To help achieve these goals, we intend to implement fully
the vision we set out at Lyon and Denver. We therefore pledge
ourselves to a shared international effort:
- To provide effective support for the efforts of these
countries to build democracy and good governance, stronger
civil society and greater transparency, and to take action
against corruption, for example by making every effort to
ratify the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention by the end of 1998;
- To recognize the importance of substantial levels of
development assistance and to mobilize resources for
development in support of reform programs, fulfilling our
responsibilities and in a spirit of burden-sharing, including
negotiating a prompt and adequate replenishment of the soft
loan arm of the World Bank (IDA 12) as well as providing
adequate resources for the Enhanced Structural Adjustment
Facility of the IMF and for the African Development Fund;
- To work to focus existing bilateral aid and investment
agency assistance in support of sound reforms, including the
development of basic social infrastructure and measures to
improve trade and investment;
- To work within the OECD on a recommendation on untying aid
to the least developed countries with a view to proposing a
text in 1999;
- To support the speedy and determined extension of debt
relief to more countries, within the terms of the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative agreed to by the
International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and Paris Club.
We welcome the progress achieved with six countries already
declared eligible for HIPC debt relief and a further two
countries likely to be declared shortly. We encourage all
eligible countries to take the policy measures needed to
embark on the process as soon as possible, so that all can be
in the process by the year 2000.
We will work with the international institutions and other
creditors to ensure that when they qualify, countries get the
relief they need, including interim relief measures whenever
necessary, to secure a lasting exit from their debt problems.
We expect the World Bank to join the future financial effort
to help the African Development Bank finance its contribution
to the HIPC initiative;
- To call on those countries who have not already done so to
forgive aid-related bilateral debt or take comparable action
for reforming least developed countries;
- To enhance mutual cooperation on infectious and parasitic
diseases and support the World Health Organization's efforts
in those areas. We support the new initiative to "Roll Back
Malaria" to relieve the suffering experienced by hundreds of
millions of people, and significantly reduce the death rate
from malaria by 2010. We will also continue our efforts to
reduce the global scourge of AIDS through vaccine
development, preventive programs and appropriate therapy, and
by our continued support for UNAIDS. We welcome the French
proposal for a "Therapeutic Solidarity Initiative" and other
proposals for the prevention and treatment of AIDS, and
request our experts to examine speedily the feasibility of
their implementation.
Teaching conflict resolution
8. We see a particular need to strengthen Africa's ability to
prevent and ease conflict, as highlighted in the U.N.
secretary-general's recent report. We will look for ways to
enhance the capacity of Africa-based institutions to provide
training in conflict prevention and peacekeeping. We also
need to consider further ways to respond to the exceptional
needs of poor post-conflict countries as they rebuild their
political, economic and social systems, in a manner
consistent with democratic values and respect for basic human
rights. In addition to immediate humanitarian assistance:
- we recognize the need for technical and financial
assistance in creating strong democratic and economic
institutions, supporting good governance alongside programs
of macroeconomic and structural reform supported by the IMF
and World Bank. We call on the World Bank to play a strong
role in coordinating bilateral and multilateral assistance in
these areas;
- We also agree on the need to consider ways for debt relief
mechanisms, including the HIPC initiative where appropriate,
to be used to release more and earlier resources for
essential rehabilitation, particularly for those countries
with arrears to the IFIs.
9. A crucial factor in ensuring sustainable development and
global growth is an efficient energy market. We therefore
endorse the results of our energy ministers' meeting in
Moscow in April. We shall continue cooperation on energy
matters in the G-8 framework. We recognize the importance of
soundly based political and economic stability in the regions
of energy production and transit. With the objective of
ensuring reliable, economic, safe and environmentally sound
energy supplies to meet the projected increase in demand, we
commit ourselves to encourage the development of energy
markets. Liberalization and restructuring to encourage
efficiency and a competitive environment should be supported
by transparent and non-discriminatory national legislative
and regulatory frameworks with a view to establishing
equitable treatment for both government and private sectors
as well as domestic and foreign entities. These are essential
to attract the new investment which our energy sectors need.
We also recognize the
10. Considering the new competitive pressures on our electric
power sectors, we reaffirm the commitment we made at the 1996
Moscow Summit to the safe operation of nuclear power plants
and the achievement of high safety standards worldwide, and
attach the greatest importance to the full implementation of
the Nuclear Safety Account grant agreements. We reaffirm our
commitment to the stated mission of the Nuclear Safety
Working Group (NSWG). We agreed to deepen Russia's role in
the activities of the NSWG, with a view to eventual full
membership in the appropriate circumstances. We acknowledge
successful cooperation on the pilot project of the
International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) and
consider it desirable to continue international cooperation
for civil nuclear fusion development.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions
11. The greatest environmental threat to our future
prosperity remains climate change. We confirm our
determination to address it, and endorse the results of our
environment ministers' meeting at Leeds Castle. The adoption
at Kyoto of a protocol with legally binding targets was a
historic turning point in our efforts to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions. We welcome the recent signature of the
Protocol by some of us and confirm the intention of the rest
of us to sign it within the next year, and resolve to make an
urgent start on the further work that is necessary to ratify
and make Kyoto a reality. To this end:
- We will each undertake domestically the steps necessary to
reduce significantly greenhouse gas emissions;
- As the Kyoto protocol says, to supplement domestic actions,
we will work further on flexible mechanisms such as
international market-based emissions trading, joint
implementation and the clean development mechanism, and on
sinks. We aim to draw up rules and principles that will
ensure an enforceable, accountable, verifiable, open and
transparent trading system and an effective compliance
regime;
- We will work together and with others to prepare for the
Buenos Aires meeting of COP4 this autumn. We will also look
at ways of working with all countries to increase global
participation in establishing targets to limit or reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. We will aim to reach agreement as
soon as possible on how the clean development mechanism can
work, including how it might best draw on the experience and
expertise of existing institutions, including the Global
Environment Facility. We look forward to increasing
participation from developing countries, which are likely to
be most affected by climate change and whose share of
emissions is growing. We will work together with developing
countries to achieve voluntary efforts and commitments,
appropriate to their national circumstances and development
needs. We shall also enhance our efforts with developing
countries to promote technological development and diffusion.
12. The recent devastating forest fires in Southeast Asia and
the Amazon, threatening not only our environment but even
economic growth and political stability, illustrate the
crucial importance of global cooperation, and of better and
more effective frameworks and practical efforts designed to
sustainably manage and conserve forests. In the year 2000 we
will assess our progress on implementation of the G-8 Action
Program published last week. We strongly support the ongoing
work on forests under the auspices of the United Nations, and
we look forward to continuing these efforts.
Growth, employability and inclusion
13. All our people, men and women, deserve the opportunity to
contribute to and share in national prosperity through work
and a decent standard of living. The challenge is how to reap
the benefits of rapid technological change and economic
globalization whilst ensuring that all our citizens share in
these benefits by increasing growth and job creation, and
building an inclusive society. To accomplish this, we
recognize the importance of modernizing domestic economic and
social structures within a sound macro-economic framework. To
these ends we strongly endorse the seven principles agreed by
the G-8 Finance, Economic, Labor and Employment Ministers at
their London Conference in February on "Growth, Employability
and Inclusion." We also welcome the conclusions of the Kobe
Jobs Conference of November 1997, with their particular focus
on active aging.
14. We discussed and welcomed the Action Plans we have each
produced to show how the seven principles of the London
Conference are being implemented. By sharing national
experiences and best practices in this area, we can improve
our policies and responses. We underlined the importance of
the involvement of employers and unions in securing
successful implementation of these Plans.
15. The Action Plans show that individually we are all making
new commitments to improve employability and job creation in
our countries. In particular, we have committed ourselves to:
- measures to help young, long-term unemployed and other
groups hard hit by unemployment find work;
- measures to help entrepreneurs set up companies;
- carrying out structural reforms, including making tax and
benefit systems more employment-friendly and liberalization
of product markets;
- measures to promote lifelong learning.
16. Each country confirmed its determination to introduce the
measures set out in its Action Plans and to pursue the
concept of active aging. Measures on active aging should
explore what forms of work are appropriate to the needs of
older workers and adapt work to suit them accordingly.
17. These measures will help generate soundly based and
equitable growth. We are also willing to share our principles
and experiences, including in the relevant international
institutions particularly the ILO, OECD and the IFIs, to help
foster growth, jobs and inclusion not only in the G-8 but
throughout the world. We renew our support for global
progress toward the implementation of internationally
recognized core labor standards, including continued
collaboration between the ILO and WTO secretariats in
accordance with the conclusions of the Singapore conference
and the proposal for an ILO declaration and implementation
mechanism on these labor standards.
Combating drugs and international crime
18. Globalization has been accompanied by a dramatic increase
in transnational crime. This takes many forms, including
trafficking in drugs and weapons; smuggling of human beings;
the abuse of new technologies to steal, defraud and evade the
law; and the laundering of the proceeds of crime.
19. Such crimes pose a threat not only to our own citizens
and their communities, through lives blighted by drugs and
societies living in fear of organized crime; but also a
global threat which can undermine the democratic and economic
basis of societies through the investment of illegal money by
international cartels, corruption, a weakening of
institutions and a loss of confidence in the rule of law.
20. To fight this threat, international cooperation is
indispensable. We ourselves, particularly since the Lyon
summit in 1996, have sought ways to improve that cooperation.
Much has already been achieved. We acknowledge and analyze
information on those engaged in money laundering and liaise
with the equivalent agencies in partner countries. We agreed
on principles and the need for adequate legislation to
facilitate assets confiscation from convicted criminals,
including ways to help each other trace, freeze and
confiscate those assets, and where possible, in accordance
with national legislation, share seized assets with other
nations.
- We agree on the need to explore ways of combating official
corruption arising from the large flows of criminal money.
- We are deeply concerned by all forms of trafficking of
human beings, including the smuggling of migrants. We agreed
to joint action to combat trafficking in women and children,
including efforts to prevent such crimes, protect victims and
prosecute the traffickers. We commit ourselves to develop a
multidisciplinary and comprehensive strategy, including
principles and an action plan for future cooperation amongst
ourselves and with third countries, including countries of
origin, transit and destination, to tackle this problem. We
consider the future comprehensive U.N. organized crime
convention an important instrument for this purpose.
- We endorse joint law enforcement action against organized
crime and welcome the cooperation between competent agencies
in tackling criminal networks. We agree to pursue further
action, particularly in dealing with major smuggling routes
and targeting specific forms of financial fraud.
- We endorse the Lyon Group's principles and action plan to
combat illegal manufacturing and trafficking of firearms. We
welcome its agreement to work toward the elaboration of a
binding international legal instrument in the context of the
U.N. transnational organized crime convention.
22. We urge the Lyon Group to intensify its ongoing work and
ask our ministers to report back to our next summit on
progress on the action plan on high-tech crime, the steps
taken against money laundering and the joint action on
trafficking in human beings. We also welcome the steps agreed
by our environment ministers on April 5 to combat
environmental crime.
23. There is a strong link between drugs and wider
international and domestic crime. We welcome the forthcoming
UNGASS on drugs. This should signal the international
community's determination in favor of a comprehensive
strategy to tackle all aspects of the drugs problem. For its
part, the G-8 is committed to partnership and shared
responsibility in the international community to combat
illicit drugs. This should include reinforced cooperation to
curb illicit trafficking in drugs and chemical precursors,
action to reduce demand in our countries, including through
policies to reduce drug dependency, and support for a global
approach to eradicating illicit crops. We welcome the UNDCP's
global approach to eliminating or significantly reducing
illicit drug production through effective alternative
development programs, where appropriate.
Nonproliferation and export controls
24. The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and
their delivery systems threatens the security of every
nation. Our countries have been in the forefront of efforts
to prevent proliferation, and we have worked closely together
to support international nonproliferation regimes. We pledge
to continue and strengthen this cooperation. As a key element
of this cooperation, we reaffirm our commitment to ensure the
effective implementation of export controls, in keeping with
our undertakings within the nonproliferation regimes. We will
deny any kind of assistance to programs for weapons of mass
destruction and their means of delivery. To this end, we
will, where appropriate, undertake and encourage the
strengthening of laws, regulations and enforcement
mechanisms. We will likewise enhance amongst ourselves and
with other countries our cooperation on export control,
including, for instance, the exchange of information. We will
ask our experts to focus on strengthening export-control
implementation.
Year 2000 Bug
25. The year 2000 (or Millennium) "bug" problem, deriving
from the way computers deal with the change to the year 2000,
presents major challenges to the international community,
with vast implications, in particular in the defense,
transport, telecommunications, financial services, energy and
environmental sectors, and we noted the vital dependence of
some sectors on others. We agreed to take further urgent
action and to share information among ourselves and with
others that will assist in preventing disruption in the near
and longer term. We shall work closely with businesses and
organizations working in those sectors, who will bear much of
the responsibility to address the problem. We will work
together in international organizations such as the World
Bank and OECD to assist developing countries to solve this
critical technological problem and prepare for the year 2000.
Next Summit
26. We accepted the invitation of the Chancellor of the
Federal Republic of Germany to meet again next year in
Cologne on June 18-20.
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