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Fifteen years is enough - March 2010

Fifteen years is enoughWhat’s changed in the international financial system and its institutions, what hasn’t and what needs to

Executive Summary
Back in 1995, the G7 met in Halifax during a “time of change and opportunity.” The meeting took place in a context of mounting deficits and debt crises in countries in the South; in the wake of economic collapse in Mexico; and amid strong global criticism from civil society, the media and governments about the World Bank and International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) austere neo-liberal structural adjustment policies.

A lot has changed since then, partly in response to the Halifax G7 Summit and subsequent G7 and G8 meetings. Too many of these improvements, however, exist only on paper. Beyond the surface, the neo-liberal, market-oriented bias that guides the Bank and Fund’s agenda and thinking has not altered.

The 2010 G8 Summit in Toronto in 2010 takes place during another “time of change and opportunity.” The financial crisis has spurred many civil society organizations (CSOs) to insist on far-reaching changes to the global financial system and its institutions. Clearly, as this publication will illustrate, 15 years of refusing to deal with the manifest shortcomings of the global economic system is enough.

  • Reports
  • Alternatives
  • Bank of the South
  • Bretton Woods Institutions
  • Chiang Mai initiative
  • Export Credit Agencies
  • International Monetary Fund
  • Paris Club
  • Regional Development Banks
  • World Bank
  • G8
  • Group of Seven
  • Group of Twenty
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • United Nations
  • World Trade Organization
  • Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
  • Finance Canada
  • globalization
  • Government of Canada policies and positions
  • IFI policies and positions
  • Millennium Development Goals
  • Poverty
  • Sustainability
  • Taxation
  • Transparency and disclosure
  • Aid
  • Innovative Mechanisms for financing development
  • Asian financial crisis
  • Bretton Woods II
  • Capital flight and financial regulation
  • Conditionality
  • Debt
  • Domestic resource mobilization
  • Financial architecture
  • Global financial crisis
  • Millennium development goals
  • Official Development Assistance
  • Structural adjustment
  • Washington consensus
  • Read more
  • 1 attachment

Policy Paper: What’s missing in the response to the global financial crisis? - January 2010

Rethinking the international financial system during a time of crisis

Introduction
On October 19 and 20, 2009, the Halifax Initiative held a conference, co-hosted by The North South Institute, the University of Ottawa and the School of International Development and Global Studies (SIDGS), entitled "What’s Missing in the Response to the Global Financial Crisis?" The meeting brought together experts from a range of backgrounds to analyze the challenges facing the global economy, discuss the ways in which the international community has responded to the current financial crisis, and identify shortcomings in these responses.

  • Briefs
  • Reports
  • Alternatives
  • Bank of the South
  • Bretton Woods Institutions
  • Chiang Mai initiative
  • International Monetary Fund
  • World Bank
  • G7
  • Group of Seven
  • Group of Twenty
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • United Nations
  • World Trade Organization
  • Canadian International Development Agency
  • Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
  • Finance Canada
  • Government of Canada policies and positions
  • Human rights
  • IFI policies and positions
  • Millennium Development Goals
  • Sustainability
  • Taxation
  • Transparency and disclosure
  • Aid
  • Innovative Mechanisms for financing development
  • Multilateral aid
  • Bretton Woods II
  • Capital flight and financial regulation
  • Conditionality
  • Debt
  • Domestic resource mobilization
  • Financial architecture
  • Global financial crisis
  • Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
  • Millennium development goals
  • Official Development Assistance
  • Structural adjustment
  • Trade
  • Washington consensus
  • Read more
  • 2 attachments

Final Report: Changing Face of Global Development Finance - April 24, 2008

In 2000, the Halifax Initiative Coalition organized a conference on Transforming the Global Financial System. At that time, the prospect of alternative institutions and mechanisms to the Bretton Woods Institutions (BWIs), for funding international development, were very much a matter of theoretical debate.

Now, just seven years later, the landscape has changed dramatically. There are now new players in the field in the form of alternative institutions, such as the Bank of the South and the Chiang Mai initiative. There are alternative sources of development funding, for example through new bi-lateral donors from China, Brazil and India, or from private sources, such as the Bill Gates Foundation. There are alternative mechanisms for financing development and regulating financial flows, such as airline levies, advance market commitments and currency transaction taxes.

  • Reports
  • Bank of the South
  • Bretton Woods Institutions
  • Chiang Mai initiative
  • IFI governance
  • Aid
  • Read more

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