APPENDIX A GENERAL ASSEMBLY DECLARATION AND PROGRAMME OF ACTION ON
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER
Resolution 3201 (S-VI). Declaration on the Establishment
of a New International Economic Order
The General Assembly
Adopts the following Declaration:
DECLARATION ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER
We, the Members of the United Nations,
Having convened a special session of the General Assembly to study for
the first time the problems of raw materials and development, devoted to the consideration
of the most important economic problems facing the world community,
Bearing in mind the spirit, purposes and principles of the Charter of the United
Nations to promote the economic advancement and social progress of all peoples,
Solemnly proclaim our united determination to work urgently for THE
ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER based on equity, sovereign
equality, interdependence, common interest and cooperation among all States, irrespective
of their economic and social systems which shall correct inequalities and redress existing
injustices, make it possible to eliminate the widening gap between the developed and the
developing countries and ensure steadily accelerating economic and social development and
peace and justice for present and future generations, and, to that end, declare:
1. The greatest and most significant achievement during the last decades has been the
independence from colonial and alien domination of a large number of peoples and nations
which has enabled them to become members of the community of free peoples. Technological
progress has also been made in all spheres of economic activities in the last three
decades, thus providing a solid potential for improving the well-being of all peoples.
However, the remaining vestiges of alien and colonial domination, foreign occupation,
racial discrimination, apartheid and neo-colonialism in all its forms continue to
be among the greatest obstacles to the full emancipation and progress of the developing
countries and all the peoples involved. The benefits of technological progress are not
shared equitably by all members of the international community. The developing countries,
which constitute 70 per cent of the world's population, account for only 30 per cent of
the worlds income. It has proved impossible to achieve an even and balanced development of
the international community under the existing international economic order. The gap
between the developed and the developing countries continues to widen in a system which
was established at a time when most of the developing countries did not even exist as
independent States and which perpetuates inequality.
2. The present international economic order is in direct conflict with current
developments in international political and economic relations. Since 1970 the world
economy has experienced a series of grave crises which have had severe repercussions,
especially on the developing countries because of their generally greater vulnerability to
external economic impulses. The developing world has become a powerful factor that makes
its influence felt in all fields of international activity. These irreversible changes in
the relationship of forces in the world necessitate the active, full and equal
participation of the developing countries in the formulation and application of all
decisions that concern the international community.
3. All these changes have thrust into prominence the reality of interdependence of all
the members of the world community. Current events have brought into sharp focus the
realization that the interests of the developed countries and those of the developing
countries can no longer be isolated from each other, that there is a close
interrelationship between the prosperity of the developed countries and the growth and
development of the developing countries, and that the prosperity of the international
community as a whole depends upon the prosperity of its constituent parts. International
co-operation for development is the shared goal and common duty of all countries. Thus the
political, economic and social well-being of present and future generations depends more
than ever on co-operation between all the members of the international community on the
basis of sovereign equality and the removal of the disequilibrium that exists between
them.
4. The new international economic order should be founded on full respect for the
following principles:
(a) Sovereign equality of States, self-determination of all peoples, inadmissibility of
the acquisition of territories by force, territorial integrity and non-interference
in the internal affairs of other States;
(b) The broadest co-operation of all the States members of the
international community, based on equity, whereby the prevailing disparities in the world
may be banished and prosperity secured for all;
(c) Full and effective participation on the basis ot equality of all
countries in the solving of world economic problems in the common interest of all
countries, bearing in mind the necessity to ensure the accelerated development of all the
developing countries, while devoiting particular attention to the adoption of special
measures in favour of the least developed land-locked and island developing countries as
well as those developing countries most seriously affected by economic crises and natural
calamities, without losing sight of the interests of other developing countries;
(d) The right of every country to adopt the economic and social system that it deems
the most appropriate for its own development and not to be subjected to discrimination of
any kind as a result;
(e) Full permanent sovereignty of every State over its natural
resources and all economic activities. In order to safeguard these resources, each State
is entitled to exercise effective control over them and their exploitation with means
suitable to its own situation, including the right to nationalization or transfer of
ownership to its nationals, this right being an expression of the full permanent
sovereignty of the State. No State may be subjected to economic, political or any other
type of coercion to prevent the free and full exercise of this inalienable right;
(f) The right of all States, territories and peoples under foreign
occupation, alien and colonial domination or apartheid to restitution and full
compensation for the exploitation arid depletion of, and damages to, the natural resources
and all other resources of those States, territories and peoples;
(g) Regulation and supervision of the activities ol transnational
corporations by taking measures in the interest of the national economies of the countries
where such transnational corporations operate on the basis of the full sovereignty of
those countries;
(h) The right of the developing countries and the peoples of
territories under colonial and racial domination and foreign occupation to achieve their
liberation and to regain effective control over their natural resources and economic
activities;
(i) The extending of assistance to developing countries, peoples and
territories which are under colonial and alien domination, foreign occupation, racial
discrimination or apartheid or are subjected to economic, political or any other type of
coercive measures to obtain from them the subordination of the exercise of their sovereign
rights and to secure from them advantages of any kind, and to neo colonialism in all its
forms, and which have established or are endeavouring to establish effective control over
their natural resources and economic activities that have been or are still under foreign
control;
(j) Just and equitable relationship between the prices of raw
materials, primary commodities, manufactured and semi-manufactured goods exported by
developing countries and the prices of raw materials, primary commodities, manufactures,
capital goods and equipment imported by them with the aim of bringing about sustained
improvement in their unsatisfactory terms of trade and the expansion of the world economy;
(k) Extension of active assistance to developing countries by
the whole international community, free of any political or military conditions;
(l) Ensuring that one of the main aims of the reformed
international monetary system shall be the promotion of the development of the developing
countries and the adequate flow of real resources to them;
(m) Improving the competitiveness of natural materials facing
competition from synthetic substitutes;
(n) Preferential and non-reciprocal treatment for developing
countries, wherever feasible, in all fields of international economic co-operation
whenever possible;
(o) Securing favourable conditions for the transfer of financial
resources to developing countries.
(p) Giving to the developing countries access to the
achievements of modern science and technology, and promoting the transfer of technology
and the creation of indigenous technology for the benefit of the developing countries in
forms and in accordance with procedures which are suited to their economies;
(q) The need for all States to put an end to the waste of
natural resources, including food products;
(r) The need for developing countries to concentrate all their
resources for the cause of development;
(s) The strengthening, through individual and collective
actions, of mutual economic, trade, financial and technical co-operation among the
developing countries, mainly on a preferential basis;
(t) Facilitating the role which producers' associations may play
within the framework of international co-operation and, in pursuance of their aims, inter
alia assisting in the promotion of sustained growth of the world economy and
accelerating the development of developing countries.
5. The unanimous adoption of the International Development Strategy for
the Second United Nations Development Decade (Resolution 2626(XXV)) was an important step
in the promotion of international economic co-operation on a just and equitable basis. The
accelerated implementation of obligations and commitments assumed by the international
community within the framework of the Strategy, particularly those concerning imperative
development needs of developing countries, would contribute significantly to the
fulfilment of the aims and objectives of the present Declaration.
6. The United Nations as a universal organization should be capable of
dealing with problems of international economic co-operation in a comprehensive manner and
ensuring equally the interests of all countries. It must have an even greater role in the
establishment of a new international economic order. The Charter of Economic Rights and
Duties of States, for the preparation of which the present Declaration will provide an
additional source of inspiration, will constitute a significant contribution in this
respect. All the States Members of the United Nations are therefore called upon to exert
maximum efforts with a view to securing the implementation of the present Declaration,
which is one of the principal guarantees for the creation of better conditions for all
peoples to reach a life worthy of human dignity.
7. The present Declaration on the Establishment of a New
International Economic Order shall be one of the most important bases of economic
relations between all peoples and all nations.
2229th plenary meeting 1 May 1974
________________________________
3202 (S.VI). Programme of Action on the Establishment of a New International Economic
Order
The General Assembly
Adopts the following Programme of Action:
PROGRAMME OF ACTION ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER
CONTENTS
Section
Page
Introduction
5
I. Fundamental problems of raw materials and primary
commodities
as related to trade and development
5
II. International monetary system and financing of the
development
of developing countries
7
III. Industrialization
8
IV. Transfer of technology
8
V. Regulation and control over the activities of transnational
corporations 8
VI. Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States
8
VII. Promotion of co-operation among developing countries.
9
VIII. Assistance in the exercise of permanent sovereignty of States
over natural resources.
9
IX. Strengthening the role of the United Nations system in the field
of international economic cooperation
9
X. Special Programme
10
__________________________________
INTRODUCTION
1. In view of the continuing severe economic imbalance in the relations
between developed and developing countries, and in the context of the constant and
continuing aggravation of the imbalance of the economies of the developing countries and
the consequent need for the mitigation of their current economic difficulties, urgent and
effective measures need to be taken by the international community to assist the
developing countries, while devoting particular attention to the least developed,
land-locked and island developing countries and those developing countries most seriously
affected by economic crises and natural calamities leading to serious retardation of
development processes
2. With a view to ensuring the application of the Declaration on the
Establishment of a New International Economic Order (Resolution 3201 (S-VI)), it
will be necessary to adapt and implement within a specified period, a programme of action
of unprecedented scope and to bring about maximum economic co-operation and understanding
among all States, particularly between developed and developing countries, based on the
principles of dignity and sovereign equality.
I. FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS OF RAW MATERIALS AND PRIMARY COMMODITIES AS RELATED TO TRADE
AND DEVELOPMENT
1. Raw materials
All efforts should be made:
(a) To put an end to all forms of foreign occupation, racial
discrimination, apartheid, colonial, neocolonial and alien domination and
exploitation through the exercise of permanent sovereignty over natural resources;
(b) To take measures for the recovery, exploitation,
development, marketing and distribution of natural resources, particularly of developing
countries, to serve their national interests, to promote collective self-reliance among
them and to strengthen mutually beneficial international economic co-operation with a view
to bringing about the accelerated development of developing countries;
(c) To facilitate the functioning and to further the aims of
producers' associations, including their joint marketing arrangements, orderly commodity
trading, improvement in the export income of producing developing countries and in their
terms of trade, and sustained growth of the world economy for the benefit of all;
(d) To evolve a just and equitable relationship between the
prices of raw materials, primary commodities, manufactured and semi-manufactured goods
exported by developing countries and the prices of raw materials, primary commodities,
food, manufactures and semi-manufactured goods and capital equipment imported by them, and
to work for a link between the prices of exports of developing countries and the prices of
their imports from developed countries;
(e) To take measures to reverse the continued trend of
stagnation or decline in the real price of several commodities exported by developing
countries, despite a general rise in commodity prices, resulting in a decline in the
export earnings of these developing countries;
(f) To take measures to expand the markets for natural products in
relation to synthetics, taking into account the interests of the developing countries, and
to utilize fully the ecological advantages of these products;
(g) To take measures to promote the processing of raw materials in the
producer developing countries.
2. Food
All efforts should be made:
(a) To take full account of specific problems of developing
countries, particularly in times of food shortages, in the international efforts connected
with the food problem;
(b) To take into account that, owing to lack of means, some
developing countries have vast potentialities of unexploited or underexploited land which,
if reclaimed and put into practical use, would contribute considerably to the solution of
the food crisis;
(c) By the international community to undertake concrete and
speedy measures with a view to arresting desertification, salination and damage by locusts
or any other similar phenomenon involving several developing countries, particularly in
Africa, and gravely affecting the agricultural production capacity of these countries, and
also to assist the developing countries affected by any such phenomenon to develop the
affected zones with a view to contributing to the solution of their food problems;
(d) To refrain from damaging or deteriorating natural resources
and food resources, especially those derived from the sea, by preventing pollution and
taking appropriate steps to protect and reconstitute those resources;
(e) By developed countries, in evolving their policies relating to
production, stocks, imports and exports of food, to take full account of the interests of:
(i) Developing importing countries which cannot afford high
prices for their imports;
(ii) Developing exporting countries which need in creased market
opportunities for
their exports;
(f) To ensure that developing countries can import the necessary quantity of
food without undue strain on their foreign exchange resources and without unpredictable
deterioration in their balance of payments, and, in this context, that special measures
are taken in respect of the least developed, land-locked and island developing countries
as well as those developing countries most seriously affected by economic crises and
natural calamities;
(g) To ensure that concrete measures to increase food production
and storage facilities in developing countries are introduced, inter alia, by
ensuring an increase in all available essential inputs, including fertilizers, from
developed countries on favourable terms;
(h) To promote exports of food products of developing countries
through just and equitable arrangements, inter alia, by the progressive elimination
of such protective and other measures as constitute unfair competition.
3. General trade
All efforts should be made:
(a) To take the following measures for the amelioration of terms of
trade of developing countries and concrete steps to eliminate chronic trade deficits of
developing countries:
(i) Fulfilment of relevant commitments already undertaken in the United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development and in the International
Development Strategy for the Second United Nations Development
Decade (Resolution 2626 (XXV)):
(ii) Improved access to markets in developed countries through the progressive removal
of tariff and non-tariff barriers and of
restrictive business practices;
(iii) Expeditious formulation of commodity agreements where appropriate, in order to
regulate as necessary
and to stabilize the world markets for raw materials and primary
commodities;
(iv) Preparation of an over-all integrated programme, setting out
guidelines and taking into account the current work in
this field, for a comprehensive range of commodities of
export interest to developing countries;
(v) Where products of developing countries compete with the domestic
production in developed
countries, each developed country should facilitate the expansion of imports
from developing countries and provide a fair and reasonable
opportunity to the
developing countries to share in the growth of the market;
(vi) When the importing developed countries derive receipts from
customs duties, taxes and
other protective measures applied to imports of these products,
consideration should be
given to the claim of the developing countries that these
receipts should be reimbursed in
full to the exporting developing countries or devoted to
providing additional resources to
meet their development needs;
(vii) Developed countries should make appropriate adjustments in their
economies so as to facilitate the expansion and
diversification of imports from developing countries and
thereby permit a rational, just and equitable international
division of lahour;
(viii) Setting up general principles for pricing policy for exports of commodities of
developing countries, with a view to rectifying and achieving satisfactory terms of
trade for them;
(ix) Until satisfactory terms of trade are achieved for all developing countries,
consideration should be given to alternative means, including
improved compensatory financing
schemes for meeting the development needs of the developing countries
concerned;
(x) Implementation, improvement and enlargement of the generalized system of
preferences for exports of agricultural primary
commodities, manufactures and semi-manufactures
from developing to developed countries and consideration of its extension to
commodities, including those which are processed or semi-processed; developing
countries which are or will
be sharing their existing tariff advantages in some developed
countries as the result of the introduction and eventual enlargement of the
generalized system of preferences should,
as a matter of urgency, be granted new openings in the
markets of other developed countries which should offer them export
opportunities that at least compensate for the sharing of those
advantages;
(xi) The setting up of buffer stocks within the framework of commodity arrangements and
their financing by international financial
institutions, wherever necessary, by the
developed countries and, when they are able to do so, by the
developing countries, with the aim of favouring the
producer developing and consumer developing countries and of
contributing to the expansion of world trade as a whole:
(xii) In cases where natural materials can satisfy the requirements of the market, new
investment
for the expansion of the capacity to produce synthetic materials and
substitutes should not be
made;
(b) To be guided by the principles of non-reciprocity and preferential treatment of
developing countries in multilateral trade negotiations between developed and
developing
countries, and to seek sustained and additional benefits for the international
trade of developing countries. so as to achieve a substantial
increase in their foreign exchange
earnings, diversification of their exports and acceleration of the rate of their
economic growth.
4. Transportation and insurance
All efforts should be made:
(a) To promote an increasing and equitable participation of developing countries
in the world shipping tonnage;
(b) To arrest and reduce the ever-increasing freight
rates in order to reduce the costs of imports to, and exports from, the developing
countries;
(c) To minimize the cost of insurance and reinsurance for
developing countries and to assist the growth of domestic insurance and reinsurance
markets in developing countries and the establishment to this end, where appropriate, of
institutions in these countries or at the regional level;
(d) To ensure the early implementation of the code of conduct
for liner conferences;
(e) To take urgent measures to increase the import and export capability of the
least developed countries and to offset the disadvantages of the adverse geographic
situation of land-locked countries, particularly with regard to their transportation and
transit costs, as well as developing island countries in order to in crease their trading
ability;
(f) By the developed countries to refrain from imposing measures or implementing
policies designed to prevent the importation, at equitable prices, of commodities from the
developing countries or from frustrating the implementation of legitimate measures and
policies adopted by the developing countries in order to improve prices and encourage the
export of such commodities.
II. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM AND FINANCING OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
I. Objectives
All efforts should be made to reform the international monetary system
with, inter alia, the following objectives:
(a) Measures to check the inflation already experienced by the developed
countries, to prevent it from being transferred to developing countries and to study and
devise possible arrangements within the International Monetary Fund to mitigate the
effects of inflation in developed countries on the economies of developing countries;
(b) Measures to eliminate the instability of the international monetary
system, in particular the uncertainty of the exchange rates, especially as it affects
adversely the trade in commodities;
(c) Maintenance of the real value of the currency reserves of the developing
countries by preventing their erosion from inflation and exchange rate depreciation of
reserve currencies;
(d) Full and effective participation of developing countries in all phases of
decision-making for the formulation of an equitable and durable monetary system and
adequate participation of developing countries in all bodies entrusted with this reform
and, particularly, in the proposed Council of Governors of the International Monetary
Fund;
(e) Adequate and orderly creation of additional liquidity with particular regard
to the needs of the developing countries through the additional allocation of special
drawing rights based on the concept of world liquidity needs to be appropriately revised
in the light of the new international environment; any creation of international liquidity
should be made through international multilateral mechanisms;
(f) Early establishment of a link between special drawing rights and additional
development financing in the interest of developing countries, consistent with the
monetary characteristics of special drawing rights;
(g) Review by the International Monetary Fund of the relevant provisions in
order to ensure effective participation by developing countries in the decision making
process;
(h) Arrangements to promote an increasing net transfer of real resources
from the developed to the developing countries;
(i) Review of the methods of operation of the International Monetary Fund, in
particular the terms for both credit repayments and "stand-by" arrangements, the
system of compensatory financing, and the terms of the financing of commodity buffer
stocks, so as to enable the developing countries to make more effective use of them.
2. Measures
All efforts should be made to take the following urgent measures to
finance the development of developing countries and to meet the balance-of-payment crises
in the developing world:
(a) Implementation at an accelerated pace by the developed countries of the
time-bound programme, as already laid down in the International Development Strategy for
the Second United Nations Development Decade, for the net amount of financial resource
transfers to developing countries; increase in the official component of the net amount of
financial resource transfers to developing countries so as to meet and even to exceed the
target of the Strategy:
(b) International financing institutions should effectively play
their role as development financing banks without discrimination on account of the
political or economic system of any member country, assistance being untied;
(c) More effective participation by developing countries, whether recipients or
contributors, in the decision-making process in the competent organs of the International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the International Development Association,
through the establishment of a more equitable pattern of voting rights;
(d) Exemption, wherever possible, of the developing countries
from all import and capital outflow controls imposed by the developed countries;
(e) Promotion of foreign investment, both public and private, from developed to
developing countries in accordance with the needs and requirements in sectors of their
economies as determined by the recipient countries;
(j) Appropriate urgent measures, including international action. should be taken
to mitigate adverse consequences for the current and future development of developing
countries arising from the burden of external debt contracted on hard terms;
(g) Debt renegotiation on a case-by-case basis with a view to concluding
agreements on debt cancellation, moratorium, rescheduling or interest subsidization;
(h) International financial institutions should take into account the special
situation of each developing country in reorienting their lending policies to suit these
urgent needs; there is also need for improvement in practices of international financial
institutions in regard to, inter alia, development financing and international
monetary problems;
(i) Appropriate steps should be taken to give priority to the least developed,
land-locked and island developing countries and to the countries most seriously affected
by economic crises and natural calamities, in the availability of loans for development
purposes which should include more favourable terms and conditions.
III. INDUSTRIALIZATION
All efforts should be made by the international community to take measures to encourage
the industrialization of the developing countries, and to this end:
(a) The developed countries should respond favourably, within the framework of
their official aid as well as international financial institutions, to the requests of
developing countries for the financing of industrial projects;
(b) The developed countries should encourage investors to finance industrial
production projects, particularly export-oriented production, in developing countries, in
agreement with the latter and within the context of their laws and regulations;
(c) With a view to bringing about a new interna tional economic structure which
should increase the share of the developing countries in world industrial production, the
developed countries and the agencies of the United Nations system, in cooperation with the
developing countries, should contribute to setting up new industrial capacities including
raw materials and commodity-transforming facilities as a matter of priority in the
developing countries that produce those raw materials and commodities;
(d) The international community should continue and expand, with the aid of the
developed countries and the international institutions, the operational and
instruction-oriented technical assistance programmes, including vocational training and
management development of national personnel of the developing countries, in the light of
their special development requirements.
IV. TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY
All efforts should be made:
(a) To formulate an international code of conduct for the transfer of technology
corresponding to needs and conditions prevalent in developing countries;
(b) To give access on improved terms to modern technology and to adapt that
technology, as appropriate, to specific economic, social and ecological conditions and
varying stages of development in developing countries;
(c) To expand significantly the assistance from developed to developing
countries in research and development programmes and in the creation of suitable
indigenous technology;
(d) To adapt commercial practices governing transfer of technology to the
requirements of the developing countries and to prevent abuse of the rights of sellers;
(e) To promote international co-operation in research and development in
exploration and exploitation, conservation and the legitimate utilization of natural
resources and all sources of energy.
In taking the above measures, the special needs of the least developed and land-locked
countries should be borne in mind.
V. REGULATION AND CONTROL OVER THE ACTIVITIES OF TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS
All efforts should be made to formulate, adopt and implement an international code of
conduct for transnational corporations:
(a) To prevent interference in the internal affairs of the countries where they
operate and their collaboration with racist regimes and colonial administrations;
(b) To regulate their activities in host countries, to eliminate restrictive
business practices and to conform to the national development plans and objectives of
developing countries, and in this context facilitate, as necessary, the review and
revision of previously concluded arrangements;
(c) To bring about assistance, transfer of technology and management skills to
developing countries on equitable and favourable terms;
(d) To regulate the repatriation of the profits accruing from their
operations, taking into account the legitimate interests of all parties concerned;
(e) To promote reinvestment of their profits in developing countries.
VI. CHARTER OF ECONOMIC RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF STATES
The Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States, the draft of which
is being prepared by a working group of the United Nations and which the General Assembly
has already expressed the intention of adopting at its twenty-ninth regular session, shall
constitute an effective instrument towards the establishment of a new system of
international economic relations based on equity, sovereign equality, and interdependence
of the interests of developed and developing countries. It is therefore of vital
importance that the aforementioned Charter be adopted by the General Assembly at its
twenty-ninth session.
VII. PROMOTION OF CO-OPERATION AMONG DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
1. Collective self-reliance and growing co-operation among developing countries will
further strengthen their role in the new international economic order. Developing
countries, with a view to expanding co-operation at the regional, subregional and
interregional levels, should take further steps, inter alia:
(a) To support the establishment and/or improvement of an appropriate mechanism
to defend the prices of their exportable commodities and to improve access to and
stabilize markets for them. In this context the increasingly effective mobilization by the
whole group of oil-exporting countries of their natural resources for the benefit of their
economic development is to be welcomed. At the same time there is the paramount need for
co-operation among the developing countries in evolving urgently and in a spirit of
solidarity all possible means to assist developing countries to cope with the immediate
problems resulting from this legitimate and perfectly justified action. The measures
already taken in this regard are a positive indication of the evolving co-operation
between developing countries;
(b) To protect their inalienable right to permanent sovereignty over their
natural resources;
(c) To promote, establish or strengthen economic integration at the regional and
subregional levels;
(d) To increase considerably their imports from other developing countries;
(e) To ensure that no developing country accords to imports from developed
countries more favourable treatment than that accorded to imports from developing
countries. Taking into account the existing international agreements, current limitations
and possibilities and also their future evolution, preferential treatment should be given
to the procurement of import requirements from other developing countries. Wherever
possible, preferential treatment should be given to imports from developing countries and
the exports of those countries;
(f) To promote close co-operation in the fields of finance, credit relations and
monetary issues, including the development of credit relations on a preferential basis and
on favourable terms;
(g) To strengthen efforts which are already being made by developing countries
to utilize available financial resources for financing development in the developing
countries through investment, financing of export-oriented and emergency projects and
other long-term assistance;
(h) To promote and establish effective instruments of co-operation in the fields
of industry, science and technology, transport, shipping and mass communication media.
2. Developed countries should support initiatives in the regional, subregional and
interregional cooperation of developing countries through the extension of financial and
technical assistance by more effective and concrete actions, particularly in the field of
commercial policy.
VIII. ASSISTANCE IN THE EXERCISE OF PERMANENT SOVEREIGNTY OF STATES OVER NATURAL
RESOURCES
All efforts should be made:
(a) To defeat attempts to prevent the free and effective exercise of the rights
of every State to full and permanent sovereignty over its natural resources;
(b) To ensure that competent agencies of the United Nations system meet requests
for assistance from developing countries in connexion with the operation of nationalized
means of production.
IX. STRENGTHENING THE ROLE OF THE UNITED NATIONS SYSTEM IN THE FIELD OF INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
1. In furtherance of the objectives of the International Development Strategy for the
Second United Nations Development Decade and in accordance with the aims and objectives of
the Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order, all Member
States pledge to make full use of the United Nations system in the implementation of the
present Programme of Action, jointly adopted by them, in working for the establishment of
a new international economic order and thereby strengthening the role of the United
Nations in the field of world-wide cooperation for economic and social development.
2. The General Assembly of the United Nations shall conduct an over-all review
of the implementation of the Programme of Action as a priority item. All the activities of
the United Nations system to be undertaken under the Programme of Action as well as those
already planned, such as the World Population Conference, 1974, the World Food Conference,
the Second General Conference of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization
and the mid-term review and appraisal of the International Development Strategy for the
Second United Nations Development Decade should be so directed as to enable the special
session of the General Assembly on development, called for under Assembly resolution 3172
(XXVIII) of 17 December 1973, to make its full contribution to the establishment of the
new international economic order. All Member States are urged, jointly and individually,
to direct their efforts and policies towards the success of that special session.
3. The Economic and Social Council shall define the policy framework
and co-ordinate the activities of all organizations, institutions and subsidiary bodies
within the United Nations system which shall be entrusted with the task of implementing
the present Programme of Action. In order to enable the Economic and Social Council to
carry out its tasks effectively:
(a) All organizations, institutions and subsidiary bodies
concerned within the United Nations system shall submit to the Economic and Social Council
progress reports on the implementation of the Programme of Action within their respective
fields of competence as often as necessary, but not less than once a year;
(b) The Economic and Social Council shall examine the progress
reports as a matter of urgency, to which end it may be convened, as necessary, in special
session or, if need be, may function continuously. It shall draw the attention of the
General Assembly to the problems and difficulties arising in connexion with the
implementation of the Programme of Action.
4. All organizations, institutions, subsidiary bodies and conferences
of the United Nations system are entrusted with the implementation of the Programme of
Action. The activities of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, as set
forth in General Assembly resolution 1995 (XIX) of 30 December 1964, should be
strengthened for the purpose of following in collaboration with other competent
organizations the development of international trade in raw materials throughout the
world.
5. Urgent and effective measures should be taken to review the lending
policies of international financial institutions, taking into account the special
situation of each developing country, to suit urgent needs, to improve the practices of
these institutions in regard to, inter alia, development financing and
international monetary problems, and to ensure more effective participation by developing
countries -whether recipients or contributors- in the decision-making process through
appropriate revision of the pattern of voting rights.
6. The developed countries and others in a position to do so should contribute
substantially to the various organizations, programmes and funds established within the
United Nations system for the purpose of accelerating economic and social development in
developing countries.
7. The present Programme of Action complements and strengthens the goals and
objectives embodied in the International Development Stratey for the Second United Nations
Development Decade as well as the new measures formulated by the General Assembly at its
twenty-eight session to offset the shortfalls in achieving those goals and objectives.
8. The implementation of the Programme of Action should he taken into account at the
time of the mid term review and appraisal of the International Developmen Strategy for the
Second United Nations Development Decade. New commitments, changes, additions and
adaptations in the Strategy should be made as appropriate, taking into account the
Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order and the present
Programme of Action.
X. SPECIAL PROGRAMME
The General Assembly adopts the following Special Programme, including
particularly emergency measures to mitigate the difficulties of the developing countries
most seriously affected by economic crisis, bearing in mind the particular problem of the
least developed and land-locked countries:
The General Assemby,
Taking into account the following considerations:
(a) The sharp increase in the prices of their essential imports such as food,
fertilizers, energy products, capital goods, equipment and services, including
transportation and transit costs, has gravely exacerbated the increasingly adverse terms
of trade of a number of developing countries, added to the burden of their foreign debt
and, cumulatively, created a situation which, if left untended, will make it impossible
for them to finance their essential imports and development and result in a further
deterioration in the levels and conditions of life in these countries. The present crisis
is the outcome of all the problems that have accumulated over the years: in the field of
trade, in monetary reform, the world-wide inflationary situation, inadequacy and delay in
provision of financial assistance and many other similar problems in the economic and
developmental fields. In facing the crisis, this complex situation must be borne in mind
so as to ensure that the Special Programme adopted by the international communiy provides
emergency relief and timely assistance to the most seriously affected countries.
Simultaneously, steps are being taken to resolve these outstanding problems through a
fundamental restructuring of the world economic system, in order to allow these countries
while solving the present difficulties to reach an acceptable level of development.
(b) The special measures adopted to assist the most seriously affected countries
must encompass not only the relief which they require on an emergency basis to maintain
their import requirements, but also, beyond that, steps to consciously promote the
capacity of these countries to produce and earn more. Unless such a comprehensive approach
is adopted there is every likelihood that the difficulties of the most seriously affected
countries may be perpetuated. Nevertheless, the first and most pressing task of the
international community is to enable these countries to meet the shortfall in their
balance-of-payments positions. But this must be simultaneously supplemented by additional
development assistance to maintain and thereafter accelerate their rate of economic
development.
(c) The countries which have been most seriously affected are precisely those
which are at the greatest disadvantage in the world economy: the least developed, the
land-locked and other low-income developing countries as well as other developing
countries whose economies have been seriously dislocated as a result of the present
economic crisis, natural calamities, and foreign aggression and occupation. An indication
of the countries thus affected, the level of the impact on their economies and the kind of
relief and assistance they require can he assessed on the basis, inter alia, of the
following criteria:
(i) Low per capita income as a reflection of
relative poverty, low productivity, low level of technology and development;
(ii) Sharp increase in their import cost of essentials relative
to export earnings;
(iii) High ratio of debt servicing to export earnings;
(iv) Insufficiency in export earnings, comparative inelasticity
of export incomes and unavailability of exportable surplus;
(v) Low level of foreign exchange reserves or their
inadequacy for requirements;
(vi) Adverse impact of higher transportation and transit costs;
(vii) Relative importance of foreign trade in the development process.
(d) The assessment of the extent and nature of the impact
on the economies of the most seriously affected countries must be made flexible, keeping
in mind the present uncertainty in the world economy, the adjustment policies that may be
adopted by the developed countries and the flow of capital and investment. Estimates of
the payments situation and needs of these countries can be assessed and projected reliably
only on the basis of their average performance over a number of years. Long-term
projections, at this time, can not but be uncertain.
(e) It is important that, in the special measures to
mitigate the difficulties of the most seriously affected countries, all the developed
countries as well as the developing countries should contribute according to their level
of development and the capacity and strength of their economies. It is notable that some
developing countries, despite their own difficulties and development needs, have shown a
willingness to play a concrete and helpful role in ameliorating the difficulties faced by
the poorer developing countries. The various initiatives and measures taken recently by
certain developing countries with adequate resources on a bilateral and multilateral basis
to contribute to alleviating the difficulties of other developing countries are a
reflection of their commitment to the principle of effective economic co-operation among
developing countries.
(f) The response of the developed countries which have by far
the greater capacity to assist the affected countries in overcoming their present
difficulties must be commensurate with their responsibilities. Their assistance should be
in addition to the presently available levels of aid. They should fulfil and if possible
exceed the targets of the International Development Strategy for the Second United Nations
Development Decade on financial assistance to the developing countries, especially that
relating to official development assistance. They should also give serious consideration
to the cancellation of the external debts of the most seriously affected countries. This
would provide the simplest and quickest relief to the affected countries. Favourable
consideration should also be given to debt moratorium and rescheduling. The current
situation should not lead the industrialized countries to adopt what will ultimately prove
to be a self-defeating policy aggravating the present crisis.
Recalling the constructive proposals made by His Imperial
Majesty the Shahanshah of Iran (A/9548, annex) and His Excellency, Mr. Houari Boumediene,
President of the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria (Official Records of the General
Assembly, Sixth Special Session. Plenary Meetings. 2208th meeting, paras. 3-152).
1. Decides to launch a Special Programme to provide emergency relief and
development assistance to the developing countries most seriously affected, as a matter of
urgency, and for the period of time necessary, at least until the end of the Second United
Nations Development Decade, to help them overcome their present difficulties and to
achieve self- sustaining economic development;
2. Decides as a first step in the Special Programme to request the
Secretary-General to launch an emergency operation to provide timely relief to the most
seriously affected developing countries, as defined in subparagraph (c) above, with
the aim of maintaining unimpaired essential imports for the duration of the coming twelve
months and to invite the industrialized countries and other potential contributors to
announce their contributions for emergency assistance, or intimate their intention to do
so, by 15 June 1974 to be provided through bilateral or multilateral channels, taking into
account the commitments and measures of assistance announced or already taken by some
countries, and further requests the Secretary-General to report the progress of the
emergency operation to the General Assembly at its twenty-ninth session, through the
Economic and Social Council at its fifty-seventh session;
3. Calls upon the industrialized countries and other potential
contributors to extend to the most seriously affected countries immediate relief and
assistance which must be of an order of magnitude that is commensurate with the needs of
these countries. Such assistance should be in addition to the existing level of aid and
provided at a very early date to the maximum possible extent on a grant basis and, where
not possible, on soft terms. The disbursement and relevant operational procedures and
terms must reflect this exceptional situation. The assistance could be provided either
through bilateral or multilateral channels, including such new institutions and facilities
that have been or are so be set up. The special measures may include the following:
(a) Special arrangements on particularly favourable terms and
conditions including possible subsidies for and assured supplies of essential commodities
and goods;
(b) Deferred payments for all or part of imports of essential
commodities and goods;
(c) Commodity assistance, including food aid, on a grant basis
or deferred payments in local currencies, bearing in mind that this should not adversely
affect the exports of developing countries;
(d) Lone-term suppliers' credits on easy terms;
(e) Lone-term financial assistance on concessionary terms;
(f) Drawings from special International Monetary Fund facilities on
concessional terms;
(g) Establishment of a link between the creation of special drawing
rights and development assistance, taking into account the additional financial
requirements of the most seriously affected countries;
(h) Subsidies, provided bilaterally or multilaterally, for interest on
funds available on commercial terms borrowed by the most seriously affected countries;
(i) Debt renegotiation on a case-by-case basis with a view to
concluding agreements on debt cancellation, moratorium or rescheduling;
(j) Provision on more favourable terms of capital goods and
technical assistance to accelerate the industrialization of the affected countries;
(k) Investment in industrial and development projects on
favourable terms;
(l) Subsidizing the additional transit and transport costs, especially
of the land-locked countries;
4. Appeals to the developed countries to consider favourably the
cancellation, moratorium or rescheduling of the debts of the most seriously affected
developing countries, on their request, as an important contribution to mitigating the
grave and urgent difficulties of these countries;
5. Decides to establish a Special Fund under the auspices of the United Nations,
through voluntary contributions from industrialized countries and other potential
contributors, as a part of the Special Programme, to provide emergency relief and
development assistance, which will commence its operations at the latest by 1 January
1975;
6. Establishes an Ad Hoc Committee on the Special
Programme, composed of thirty-six Member States appointed by the President of the General
Assembly, after appropriate consultations, bearing in mind the purposes of the Special
Fund and its terms of reference;
(a) To make recommendations, inter alia, on the
scope, machinery and modes of operation of the Special Fund, taking into account the
need for:
(i) Equitable representation on its governing body;
(ii) Equitable distribution of its resources;
(iii) Full utilization of the services and facilities of
existing international organizations;
(iv) The possibility of merging the United Nations Capital
Development Fund with the
opera tions of the Special Fund;
(v) A central monitoring body to oversee the various measures
being taken both
bilaterally and multilaterally;
and, to this end, bearing in mind the different ideas and proposals
submitted at the sixth special session. including those put forward by Iran (A/AC.166/L15;
see also A/9548, annex) and those made at the 2208th plenary meeting, and the comments
thereon, and the possibility of utilizing the Special Fund to provide an alternative
channel for normal development assistance after the emergency period;
(b) To monitor, pending commencement of the operations of the Special
Fund, the various measures being taken both bilaterally and multilaterally to assist the
most seriously affected countries;
(c) To prepare, on the basis of information provided by the countries
concerned and by appropriate agencies of the United Nations system, a broad assessment of:
(i) The magnitude of the difficulties
facing the most seriously affected countries;
(ii) The kind and quantities of the commodities and goods
essentially required by them;
(iii) Their need for financial assistance;
(iv) Their technical assistance requirements, including
especially access to technology;
7. Requests the Secretary-General of the United Nations,
the Secretary-General of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, the
President of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Managing
Director of the International Monetary Fund, the Administrator of the United Nations
Development Programme and the heads of the other competent international organizations to
assist the Ad Hoc Committee on the Special Programme in performing the functions
assigned to it under paragraph 6 above, and to help, as appropriate, in the operations of
the Special Fund;
8. Requests the International Monetary Fund to expedite
decisions on:
(a) The establishment of an extended special facility with a view to
enabling the most seriously affected developing countries to participate in it on
favourable terms;
(b) The creation of special drawing rights and the early
establishment of the link between their allocation and development financing;
(c) The establishment and operation of the proposed new special facility to extend
credits and subsidize interest charges on commercial funds borrowed by Member States,
bearing in mind the interests of the developing countries and especially the additional
financial requirements of the most seriously affected countries;
9. Requests the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund to place
their managerial, financial and technical services at the disposal of Governments
contributing to emergency financial relief so as to enable them to assist without delay in
channelling funds to the recipients, making such institutional and procedural changes as
may be required;
10. Invites the United Nations Development Proeramme to take the
necessary steps, particularly at the country level, to respond on an emernency basis to
requests for additional assistance which it may be called upon to render within the
framework of the Special Programme;
11. Requests the Ad Hoc Committee on the Special Programme to submit its
report and recommendations to the Economic and Social Council at its fifty-seventh
session and invites the Council, on the basis of its consideration of that report, to
submit suitable recommendations to the General Assembly at its twenty-ninth session;
12. Decides to consider as a matter of high priority at its twenty-ninth
session, within the framework of a new international economic order, the question of
special measures for the most seriously affected countries.
2229th plenary meeting 1 May 1974
************
The President of the General Assembly subsequently informed the Secretary-General (A/9558
and Add. 1.) that, in pursuance of Section X, paragraph 6, of the above resolution,
he had appointed the members of the Ad Hoc Committee on the Special Programme.
As a result, the Ad Hoc Committee will be composed of the following Member
States: ALGERIA, ARGENTINA, AUSTRALIA, BRAZIL, CHAD, COSTA RICA, CZECHOSLOVAKIA,
FRANCE, GERMANY (FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF), GUYANA, INDIA, IRAN, JAPAN, KUWAIT, MADAGASCAR,
NEPAL, NETHERLANDS, NIGERIA, NORWAY, PAKISTAN, PARAGUAY, PHILIPPINES, SOMALIA, SRI LANKA,
SUDAN, SWAZILAND, SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC, TURKEY, UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS,
UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, UPPER
VOLTA, URUGUAY, VENEZUELA, YUGOSLAVIA AND ZAIRE.
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