Righting Finance
  
As part of the preparatory work for  agreement on a Post-2015 Development Agenda, the outcome  document of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (known as  “Rio+20”) called for the establishment of an intergovernmental committee of  experts on financing for sustainable development tasked with preparing a report  “proposing options on an effective sustainable development financing strategy  to facilitate the mobilization of resources and their effective use in  achieving sustainable development objectives.”
 In this regard the Righting Finance Initiative  issued a statement on “Co-Creating New Partnerships for Financing Sustainable  Development,” which called for the post-2015  agenda, including means of financing it, to be aligned with the international human  rights framework and sustainable development commitments.
 It  stressed that in view of the systemic market failures of the past decade, the  need for an effective and capable government as a protector and guarantor of  human rights in development rather than a mere enabler of private sector  development is greater than ever. Moreover, there is enough experience  documented in the literature on the negative impact of privatization on growing  inequality and gaps regarding access to basic services, such as education,  health, water, and energy. States in the end bear primary responsibility for  international cooperation to achieve human rights, so the nature of the Global  Partnership for Development as one driven by States should be reaffirmed.
 The  initiative states that while a number of partnerships can play a role in the  post-2015 development agenda, those partnerships do not operate in a vacuum. As  they are voluntary, opt-in and opt- out arrangements, they cannot by any means  crowd-out States’ existing obligations of cooperation to achieve human rights.  So, the international human rights framework takes primacy and precedence above  any agreements with the private sector.
 Ensuring  such primacy and precedence will entail a number of consequences for the approach  to partnerships, as follows:
- Governments’  commitments on tackling global asymmetries in areas such as trade, debt,  finance, ODA and taxation that represent the international enabling conditions  and mobilize resources to achieve sustainable development and human rights  should remain at the core of the agenda. Governments also should acknowledge  and transform the unequal power relations between different multilateral  organizations of global governance, between transnational corporations and  States, and between the more and the less developed States.
- States  are required to use the maximum available resources to meet their human rights  obligations. These include (1) government spending and revenue, (2) development  assistance; (3) debt and deficit financing; and (4) monetary policy and  financial regulation. A more realistic and long-term focus on strengthening  public resourcing for development will lead to financing for development that  is not only more reliable and sustainable, but also more democratic and open to  scrutiny by the very people we claim to be “developing.” Consistent with the  commitments made at the Rio + 20 Conference, new sources of financing such as  public- private partnerships and South-South cooperation must be recognized as  complementary and not a substitute for traditional means of implementation.
- Private  sector actors are essentially mandated to realize maximum profits for their  shareholders, an aim that more often than not comes at odds with the public  interest of home and/or host States. States, individually and in concert with  one another, are duty-bound to ensuring the progressive realization of human  rights for all, so guaranteeing equity and non-discrimination based on income,  gender, race-ethnicity, location, sexual orientation, and age, among others.  This means that only through strong regulatory and accountability frameworks  can we hope that the private sector will be a useful contributor to the  realization of sustainable development goals. It also means that governments,  operating jointly or individually, can at any time declare there are areas that  will remain off-limits for any form of partnership with the private sector.
- In  those areas where the private sector is potentially deemed a suitable partner,  given the history of human rights abuses implicating private companies,  especially transnational corporations, the following guidelines should be  embraced:
- The  partners in these partnerships should act in abidance of the human rights  framework, which imposes obligations and correlative duties. Consistent with  the call by the High Commissioner for Human, governments are required to  prevent and protect people against human rights abuses perpetrated by private  actors, and people affected by breaches of those obligations have a right to  effective remedy. It is also important to use a dose of healthy scepticism when  projecting the extent to which, in practice, they will address human rights  concerns raised by private sector behaviour. Study after study show that the  private sector uses its transnational presence as a way to arbitrage, when not  entirely avoid, the domestic laws of places in which it operates, and  ultimately escape any accountability for its actions. Moreover, the economic  power of these actors often means they have the level of access and capacity to  lobby decision-makers to shape to their advantage legislative, regulatory and  judicial environments. This way they can frequently rig access to remedies for  victims, or pre-empt it altogether (examples are regulatory stability agreements  and arbitration clauses that subject human rights controversies to investment  tribunals).
- Human  rights principles call for full participation by, and transparency towards,  those affected in the negotiation, implementation and monitoring of partnerships.  Participation cannot be fully realized without civil society groups that  independently evaluate whether objectives set by governments are met and shape  public opinion in holding government agencies to account for failing to  deliver. Partnerships should accord an institutionalized role for civil  society, particularly with regard to priority-setting and accountability.  Partnerships can only be truly effective if founded on full transparency and  meaningful accountability of all partners involved. As a summary of post-2015  consultations observed, ̈the consultations consistently present human rights as  a non-negotiable element to deliver accountability to the new commitments. ̈  Over and above public-private ventures, ensuring accountability of these key  development actors to human rights will be the essential ingredient to making  the new generation of goals transformative. Accountability cannot take place in  the absence of a legal framework guaranteeing that civil society groups will  not risk their safety and physical integrity for seeking to expose business’  misconduct – whether such misconduct was with or without State complicity.
- There  need to be clear criteria, in advance, to determine whether a specific private  sector actor is fit for a partnership in pursuit of the post-2015 goals. This  is not only in the interest of human rights, but in the interest of the UN,  which might never recover from the reputational shock if chief private  financiers it engages with are also chief violators of its most cherished  principles. Such criteria should examine:
(a) whether the private  actor has a history or current status of serious allegations of abusing human rights or the  environment, including in their cross-border activities; 
 (b) whether the private  actor has a proven track record (or the potential) to deliver on sustainable  development, as articulated by the UN outcome by 2015;
 (c) whether the private  actor has previous involvement in acts of corruption with government officials;
 (d) whether the private  actor is fully transparent in its financial reporting and fully respecting  existing tax responsibilities in all countries it operates, and not undermining  sustainable development through tax avoidance;
 (e) any conflicts of  interest in order to eliminate potential private donors whose activities are  antithetical or contradictory to the UN Charter, the Universal Declaration on  Human Rights, and the SDG framework.
- Governments  should commit to take immediate measures to ensure that businesses respect  human rights and the environment, including by mandating independent, rigorous  and periodic human rights and environmental impact assessments of large  businesses.
- Partnerships must not limit the capacity of  governments to mobilize their maximum available resources and avoid  retrogression in the enjoyment of rights, as defined by existing human rights  legal commitments. Where fiscal support is provided to the private sector, such  resources are being deviated from their potential use to support the  fulfillment of economic and social rights. Fiscal resources should only be  applied to support the private sector in instances where it can be demonstrated  concretely that a) such allocation will advance certain rights, b) this is a  more effective use of such resources than through public investment, c)  mechanisms exist for the transparent and public participation of those affected  by the use of those resources and d) performance in meeting the promised  targets will be evaluated and monitored periodically, with lack of compliance  credibly giving rise to a withdrawal of the fiscal support.
Note:
 Righting Finance is taken from “Misdirecting  Finances,” a Global Policy Forum paper, 21 February 2014, available at  http://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/252-the-millenium-...  and a statement by the Righting Finance Initiative on “Co-creating new  partnerships for Financing Sustainable Development,” 4-5 April, Helsinki,  Finland, available at  http://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/252-the-millenium-...
 
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Key questions on “outsourcing development” 
As private finance follows market trends  leading to a concentration of resources, what regulatory framework or policies  could ensure that it delivers development objectives?
Analysis by the Overseas Development Institute  (ODI) has shown that “leverage ratios do not have a one-to-one relationship  with additionality.” How can we be sure that these mechanisms really leverage  additional resources?
With private investment increasingly taking  the decisions that determine development funding, how can the UN ensure  transparency and accountability and regular reporting?
Should mechanisms be promoted when they may  increase developing countries’ debt burdens to unsustainable levels?    |