Arab Economic, Development and Social Summit to be held in Kuwait next month
would focus on the global financial crisis, infrastructure in the Arab world and
social issues, coordinator general for the summit said yesterday.
In an exclusive interview with Xinhua at the headquarters of the Arab League
(AL) in Cairo, Mervat Tellawi said, "this is the first summit to be held to
discuss and address all these issues," adding "businessmen, intellectuals and
civil associations with politicians and state leaders to exchange thoughts and
solutions."
The Kuwait gathering scheduled for Jan. 19 and 20 would be the first for
heads of state of the 22-member AL to devote to economic and social development.
Tellawi said the leaders would discuss the impacts of the global crisis on
the Arab economy and map out collective steps to address the crisis.
The crisis makes both Arab individuals and governments to reconsider how to
invest their funds instead of investing in international markets "which they
wrongly believed were stable and secure," she said.
It has been proved that the return in the international markets is much lower
than that in Arab markets, even in normal circumstances, she said. "This may be
an incentive for the Arab states to invest their funds within the Arab region in
particular."
Western countries were resentful of the Arab sovereign funds that buy stocks
and bonds in European financial institutions, citing the Arabs seek to control
or influence the financial policies of the West, according to Tellawi.
The Middle East holds the largest sovereignty funds in the world, with the
United Arab Emirates boasting some US$900 billion of such funds, Kuwait holding
US$200 billion and Qatar US$60 billion. The Saudi Arabia established its first
sovereignty fund of US$5.3 billion this year.
The Arab nations currently invest most of their sovereignty funds in the
European and American markets, eying purchasing assets at cheap prices while the
West was suffering from the sluggish economy.
Tellawi disclosed that finance ministers and central bank governors from Arab
nations would meet several days prior to the summit to decide what collective
steps to be taken in face of the crisis.
As for the plunging oil prices, Tellawi said low oil prices will certainly
affect the budgets and development plans of Arab countries, but it will lead to
the reduction of high inflation which has plagued many Arab countries,
especially the oil-rich Gulf ones.
"We must work to address negative impacts and maximize the positive aspects
and use them," said the former Egyptian minister of social affairs and
insurance.
Oil prices has witnessed dramatic ups and downs during the past year, which
fell to around US$100 a barrel in September and dropped below US$50 in November,
declining by more than two-thirds since their mid-July peak.
The Kuwait summit has been in preparation for two years, the coordinator
said, noting that Arab leaders agreed to hold such a summit during the annual
Arab Summit in Riyadh in March 2007 as they found Arab national security has
been affected by the economic and social underdevelopment.
"The Arab world needs reform and modernization to tackle a number of
challenges," including increasing rates of poverty and unemployment,
deteriorating living conditions, limited volume of intra-Arab trade and modest
domestic investment, capital outflow and brain drain and poor infrastructure,
she said.
The summit secretariat has so far received over 400 proposals and projects
from unions, intellectuals, investors and research centers, but would only
select and submit very limited number of projects to the summit for approval,
according to Tellawi.
The projects to be chosen would benefit all Arab countries and cover Arab
power linkage, roads and railways networks and food security plans, she said.
"We import 60 percent of our food needs from abroad and therefore must boost
agriculture in Arab countries, such as Sudan, Syria, Egypt and Morocco, to
ensure the food security," she said.
Also among the chosen are education and manpower training projects to reduce
the unemployment rate and provide manpower suitable for Arab labor markets, said
the coordinator.
Projects on reducing poverty is the most important to be presented to the
summit, she said.
Economic reports have showed that the Arab population, which currently stands
at around 300 million, would double in three decades.
The number of jobless Arabs is estimated at 60 million and Arab countries
need to create more than 80 million jobs by 2020, according to the reports.
In pursuit of Arab economic unity, Tellawi said the Arab nations have a
roadmap to establish the Customs Union between 2015and 2020 and thus to set up
the Arab common market afterwards.
The summit would not be held regularly, but there will be a follow-up
mechanism, she said, noting that Egypt has officially applied to host the next
economic summit two years after the Kuwait one.